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Dive into the research topics where Kristian Tølbøl Sørensen is active.

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Featured researches published by Kristian Tølbøl Sørensen.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2015

Automation of a single-DNA molecule stretching device

Kristian Tølbøl Sørensen; Joanna M. Lopacinska; Niels Tommerup; Asli Silahtaroglu; Anders Kristensen; Rodolphe Marie

We automate the manipulation of genomic-length DNA in a nanofluidic device based on real-time analysis of fluorescence images. In our protocol, individual molecules are picked from a microchannel and stretched with pN forces using pressure driven flows. The millimeter-long DNA fragments free flowing in micro- and nanofluidics emit low fluorescence and change shape, thus challenging the image analysis for machine vision. We demonstrate a set of image processing steps that increase the intrinsically low signal-to-noise ratio associated with single-molecule fluorescence microscopy. Furthermore, we demonstrate how to estimate the length of molecules by continuous real-time image stitching and how to increase the effective resolution of a pressure controller by pulse width modulation. The sequence of image-processing steps addresses the challenges of genomic-length DNA visualization; however, they should also be general to other applications of fluorescence-based microfluidics.


Optics Express | 2015

Refractometric monitoring of dissolution and fluid flow with distributed feedback dye laser sensor

Christoph Vannahme; Kristian Tølbøl Sørensen; Carsten Gade; Martin Dufva; Anders Kristensen

Monitoring the dissolution of solid material in liquids and monitoring of fluid flow is of significant interest for applications in chemistry, food production, medicine, and especially in the fields of microfluidics and lab on a chip. Here, real-time refractometric monitoring of dissolution and fast fluid flow with DFB dye laser sensors with an optical imaging spectroscopy setup is presented. The dye laser sensors provide both low detection limits and high spatial resolution. It is demonstrated how the materials NaCl, sucrose, and bovine serum albumin show characteristic dissolution patterns. The unique feature of the presented method is a high frame rate of up to 20 Hz, which is proven to enable the monitoring of fast flow of a sucrose solution jet into pure water.


Optics Express | 2015

All-polymer photonic crystal slab sensor

Pétur Gordon Hermannsson; Kristian Tølbøl Sørensen; Christoph Vannahme; Cameron L. C. Smith; Jan J. Klein; Maria-Melanie Russew; Gabi Grützner; Anders Kristensen

An all-polymer photonic crystal slab sensor is presented, and shown to exhibit narrow resonant reflection with a FWHM of less than 1 nm and a sensitivity of 31 nm/RIU when sensing media with refractive indices around that of water. This results in a detection limit of 4.5 × 10(-6) RIU when measured in conjunction with a spectrometer of 12 pm/pixel resolution. The device is a two-layer structure, composed of a low refractive index polymer with a periodically modulated surface height, covered with a smooth upper-surface high refractive index inorganic-organic hybrid polymer modified with ZrO2based nanoparticles. Furthermore, it is fabricated using inexpensive vacuum-less techniques involving only UV nanoreplication and polymer spin-casting, and is thus well suited for single-use biological and refractive index sensing applications.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Refractive index dispersion sensing using an array of photonic crystal resonant reflectors

Pétur Gordon Hermannsson; Christoph Vannahme; Cameron L. C. Smith; Kristian Tølbøl Sørensen; Anders Kristensen

Refractive index sensing plays a key role in various environmental and biological sensing applications. Here, a method is presented for measuring the absolute refractive index dispersion of liquids using an array of photonic crystal resonant reflectors of varying periods. It is shown that by covering the array with a sample liquid and measuring the resonance wavelength associated with transverse electric polarized quasi guided modes as a function of period, the refractive index dispersion of the liquid can be accurately obtained using an analytical expression. This method is compact, can perform measurements at arbitrary number of wavelengths, and requires only a minute sample volume. The ability to sense a materials dispersion profile offers an added dimension of information that may be of benefit to optofluidic lab-on-a-chip applications.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Enrichment of megabase-sized DNA molecules for single-molecule optical mapping and next-generation sequencing

Joanna M Łopacińska-Jørgensen; Jonas Nyvold Pedersen; Mads Bak; Mana M. Mehrjouy; Kristian Tølbøl Sørensen; Peter Friis Østergaard; Brian Bilenberg; Anders Kristensen; Rafael J. Taboryski; Henrik Flyvbjerg; Rodolphe Marie; Niels Tommerup; Asli Silahtaroglu

Next-generation sequencing (NGS) has caused a revolution, yet left a gap: long-range genetic information from native, non-amplified DNA fragments is unavailable. It might be obtained by optical mapping of megabase-sized DNA molecules. Frequently only a specific genomic region is of interest, so here we introduce a method for selection and enrichment of megabase-sized DNA molecules intended for single-molecule optical mapping: DNA from a human cell line is digested by the NotI rare-cutting enzyme and size-selected by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. For demonstration, more than 600 sub-megabase- to megabase-sized DNA molecules were recovered from the gel and analysed by denaturation-renaturation optical mapping. Size-selected molecules from the same gel were sequenced by NGS. The optically mapped molecules and the NGS reads showed enrichment from regions defined by NotI restriction sites. We demonstrate that the unannotated genome can be characterized in a locus-specific manner via molecules partially overlapping with the annotated genome. The method is a promising tool for investigation of structural variants in enriched human genomic regions for both research and diagnostic purposes. Our enrichment method could potentially work with other genomes or target specified regions by applying other genomic editing tools, such as the CRISPR/Cas9 system.


Micromachines | 2017

Label-Free Monitoring of Diffusion in Microfluidics

Kristian Tølbøl Sørensen; Anders Kristensen

Label-free, real-time detection of concentration gradients is demonstrated in a microfluidic H-filter, using an integrated photonic crystal slab sensor to monitor sample refractive index with spatial resolution. The recorded diffusion profiles reveal root-mean-square diffusion lengths for non-fluorescing and non-absorbing molecules, both small (glucose, 180 Da) and large (bovine serum albumin, 67 kDa).


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Multi-wavelength laser sensor surface for high frame rate imaging refractometry(Conference Presentation)

Anders Kristensen; Christoph Vannahme; Kristian Tølbøl Sørensen; Martin Dufva

A highly sensitive distributed feedback (DFB) dye laser sensor for high frame rate imaging refractometry without moving parts is presented. The laser sensor surface comprises areas of different grating periods. Imaging in two dimensions of space is enabled by analyzing laser light from all areas in parallel with an imaging spectrometer. Refractive index imaging of a 2 mm by 2 mm surface is demonstrated with a spatial resolution of 10 μm, a detection limit of 8 10-6 RIU, and a framerate of 12 Hz, limited by the CCD camera. Label-free imaging of dissolution dynamics is demonstrated.


Microelectronic Engineering | 2014

Monolithic integration of DUV-induced waveguides into plastic microfluidic chip for optical manipulation

M. Khoury; Christoph Vannahme; Kristian Tølbøl Sørensen; Anders Kristensen; Kirstine Berg-Sørensen


Optics Express | 2018

Effects of water-absorption and thermal drift on a polymeric photonic crystal slab sensor

Kristian Tølbøl Sørensen; Charlotte Bonde Ingvorsen; Line Hagner Nielsen; Anders Kristensen


Archive | 2017

Cuvette and method for measuring refractive index in a spectrophotometer

Anders Kristensen; Kristian Tølbøl Sørensen; Emil Højlund-Nielsen

Collaboration


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Anders Kristensen

Technical University of Denmark

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Christoph Vannahme

Technical University of Denmark

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Martin Dufva

Technical University of Denmark

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Cameron L. C. Smith

Technical University of Denmark

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Carsten Gade

Technical University of Denmark

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Niels Tommerup

University of Copenhagen

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Rodolphe Marie

Technical University of Denmark

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Brian Bilenberg

Technical University of Denmark

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