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Dive into the research topics where Rafal M. Pielak is active.

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Featured researches published by Rafal M. Pielak.


Science Translational Medicine | 2016

A soft, wearable microfluidic device for the capture, storage, and colorimetric sensing of sweat

Ahyeon Koh; Daeshik Kang; Yeguang Xue; Seungmin Lee; Rafal M. Pielak; Jeonghyun Kim; Taehwan Hwang; Seunghwan Min; Anthony Banks; Philippe Bastien; Megan Manco; Liang Wang; Kaitlyn R. Ammann; Kyung In Jang; Phillip Won; Seungyong Han; Roozbeh Ghaffari; Ungyu Paik; Marvin J. Slepian; Guive Balooch; Yonggang Huang; John A. Rogers

A soft, skin-mounted microfluidic device captures microliter volumes of sweat and quantitatively measures biochemical markers by colorimetric analysis. Better health? Prepare to sweat Wearable technology is a popular way many people monitor their general health and fitness, tracking heart rate, calories, and steps. Koh et al. now take wearable technology one step further. They have developed and tested a flexible microfluidic device that adheres to human skin. This device collects and analyzes sweat during exercise. Using colorimetric biochemical assays and integrating smartphone image capture analysis, the device detected lactate, glucose, and chloride ion concentrations in sweat as well as sweat pH while stuck to the skin of individuals during a controlled cycling test. Colorimetric readouts showed comparable results to conventional analyses, and the sweat patches remained intact and functional even when used during an outdoor endurance bicycle race. The authors suggest that microfluidic devices could be used during athletic or military training and could be adapted to test other bodily fluids such as tears or saliva. Capabilities in health monitoring enabled by capture and quantitative chemical analysis of sweat could complement, or potentially obviate the need for, approaches based on sporadic assessment of blood samples. Established sweat monitoring technologies use simple fabric swatches and are limited to basic analysis in controlled laboratory or hospital settings. We present a collection of materials and device designs for soft, flexible, and stretchable microfluidic systems, including embodiments that integrate wireless communication electronics, which can intimately and robustly bond to the surface of the skin without chemical and mechanical irritation. This integration defines access points for a small set of sweat glands such that perspiration spontaneously initiates routing of sweat through a microfluidic network and set of reservoirs. Embedded chemical analyses respond in colorimetric fashion to markers such as chloride and hydronium ions, glucose, and lactate. Wireless interfaces to digital image capture hardware serve as a means for quantitation. Human studies demonstrated the functionality of this microfluidic device during fitness cycling in a controlled environment and during long-distance bicycle racing in arid, outdoor conditions. The results include quantitative values for sweat rate, total sweat loss, pH, and concentration of chloride and lactate.


Science Advances | 2015

Epidermal devices for noninvasive, precise, and continuous mapping of macrovascular and microvascular blood flow

R. Chad Webb; Yinji Ma; Siddharth Krishnan; Yuhang Li; Stephen Yoon; Xiaogang Guo; Xue Feng; Yan Shi; Miles Seidel; Nam Heon Cho; Jonas Kurniawan; James Ahad; Niral Sheth; Joseph Kim; James G. Taylor Vi; Tom Darlington; Ken Chang; Weizhong Huang; Joshua Ayers; Alexander Gruebele; Rafal M. Pielak; Marvin J. Slepian; Yonggang Huang; Alexander M. Gorbach; John A. Rogers

Advances in ultrathin, skin-like electronics lead to wearable devices for continuous, noninvasive blood flow monitoring. Continuous monitoring of variations in blood flow is vital in assessing the status of microvascular and macrovascular beds for a wide range of clinical and research scenarios. Although a variety of techniques exist, most require complete immobilization of the subject, thereby limiting their utility to hospital or clinical settings. Those that can be rendered in wearable formats suffer from limited accuracy, motion artifacts, and other shortcomings that follow from an inability to achieve intimate, noninvasive mechanical linkage of sensors with the surface of the skin. We introduce an ultrathin, soft, skin-conforming sensor technology that offers advanced capabilities in continuous and precise blood flow mapping. Systematic work establishes a set of experimental procedures and theoretical models for quantitative measurements and guidelines in design and operation. Experimental studies on human subjects, including validation with measurements performed using state-of-the-art clinical techniques, demonstrate sensitive and accurate assessment of both macrovascular and microvascular flow under a range of physiological conditions. Refined operational modes eliminate long-term drifts and reduce power consumption, thereby providing steps toward the use of this technology for continuous monitoring during daily activities.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Thermal Transport Characteristics of Human Skin Measured In Vivo Using Ultrathin Conformal Arrays of Thermal Sensors and Actuators

R. Chad Webb; Rafal M. Pielak; Philippe Bastien; Joshua Ayers; Juha Niittynen; Jonas Kurniawan; Megan Manco; Athena Lin; Nam Heon Cho; Viktor Malyrchuk; Guive Balooch; John A. Rogers

Measurements of the thermal transport properties of the skin can reveal changes in physical and chemical states of relevance to dermatological health, skin structure and activity, thermoregulation and other aspects of human physiology. Existing methods for in vivo evaluations demand complex systems for laser heating and infrared thermography, or they require rigid, invasive probes; neither can apply to arbitrary regions of the body, offers modes for rapid spatial mapping, or enables continuous monitoring outside of laboratory settings. Here we describe human clinical studies using mechanically soft arrays of thermal actuators and sensors that laminate onto the skin to provide rapid, quantitative in vivo determination of both the thermal conductivity and thermal diffusivity, in a completely non-invasive manner. Comprehensive analysis of measurements on six different body locations of each of twenty-five human subjects reveal systematic variations and directional anisotropies in the characteristics, with correlations to the thicknesses of the epidermis (EP) and stratum corneum (SC) determined by optical coherence tomography, and to the water content assessed by electrical impedance based measurements. Multivariate statistical analysis establishes four distinct locations across the body that exhibit different physical properties: heel, cheek, palm, and wrist/volar forearm/dorsal forearm. The data also demonstrate that thermal transport correlates negatively with SC and EP thickness and positively with water content, with a strength of correlation that varies from region to region, e.g., stronger in the palmar than in the follicular regions.


Microsystems & Nanoengineering | 2017

Multimodal epidermal devices for hydration monitoring

Siddharth Krishnan; Yunzhou Shi; R. Chad Webb; Yinji Ma; Philippe Bastien; Kaitlyn E. Crawford; Ao Wang; Xue Feng; Megan Manco; Jonas Kurniawan; Edward Tir; Yonggang Huang; Guive Balooch; Rafal M. Pielak; John A. Rogers

Precise, quantitative in vivo monitoring of hydration levels in the near surface regions of the skin can be useful in preventing skin-based pathologies, and regulating external appearance. Here we introduce multimodal sensors with important capabilities in this context, rendered in soft, ultrathin, ‘skin-like’ formats with numerous advantages over alternative technologies, including the ability to establish intimate, conformal contact without applied pressure, and to provide spatiotemporally resolved data on both electrical and thermal transport properties from sensitive regions of the skin. Systematic in vitro studies and computational models establish the underlying measurement principles and associated approaches for determination of temperature, thermal conductivity, thermal diffusivity, volumetric heat capacity, and electrical impedance using simple analysis algorithms. Clinical studies on 20 patients subjected to a variety of external stimuli validate the device operation and allow quantitative comparisons of measurement capabilities to those of existing state-of-the-art tools.


Analytical Methods | 2016

Analysis of bacteria using zero volt paper spray

Pu Wei; Soumabha Bag; Christopher J. Pulliam; Dalton T. Snyder; Rafal M. Pielak; R. Graham Cooks

The application of zero volt paper spray to the discrimination between species of bacteria is demonstrated here. While absolute signal intensities of representative lipids from bacterial membranes were three orders of magnitude lower than for conventional paper spray performed at high potential (kilovolts), the significant reduction in noise offset this disadvantage, resulting in clear separation in principal component analysis space between Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria as well as excellent separation between bacteria species.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Soft, stretchable, epidermal sensor with integrated electronics and photochemistry for measuring personal UV exposures

Yunzhou Shi; Megan Manco; Dominique Moyal; Gil Huppert; Hitoshi Araki; Anthony Banks; Hemant Joshi; Richard McKenzie; Alex Seewald; Guy Griffin; Ellora Sen-Gupta; Donald Wright; Philippe Bastien; Florent Valceschini; Sophie Seité; John A. Wright; Roozbeh Ghaffari; John A. Rogers; Guive Balooch; Rafal M. Pielak

Excessive ultraviolet (UV) radiation induces acute and chronic effects on the skin, eye and immune system. Personalized monitoring of UV radiation is thus paramount to measure the extent of personal sun exposure, which could vary with environment, lifestyle, and sunscreen use. Here, we demonstrate an ultralow modulus, stretchable, skin-mounted UV patch that measures personal UV doses. The patch contains functional layers of ultrathin stretchable electronics and a photosensitive patterned dye that reacts to UV radiation. Color changes in the photosensitive dyes correspond to UV radiation intensity and are analyzed with a smartphone camera. A software application has feature recognition, lighting condition correction, and quantification algorithms that detect and quantify changes in color. These color changes are then correlated with corresponding shifts in UV dose, and compared to existing UV dose risk levels. The soft mechanics of the UV patch allow for multi-day wear in the presence of sunscreen and water. Two evaluation studies serve to demonstrate the utility of the UV patch during daily activities with and without sunscreen application.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2017

Materials and Device Designs for an Epidermal UV Colorimetric Dosimeter with Near Field Communication Capabilities

Hitoshi Araki; Jeonghyun Kim; Shaoning Zhang; Anthony Banks; Kaitlyn E. Crawford; Xing Sheng; Philipp Gutruf; Yunzhou Shi; Rafal M. Pielak; John A. Rogers


Analyst | 2016

Rapid discrimination of bacteria using a miniature mass spectrometer

Christopher J. Pulliam; Pu Wei; Dalton T. Snyder; Xiao Wang; Zheng Ouyang; Rafal M. Pielak; R. Graham Cooks


Archive | 2017

DEVICE AND SYSTEM FOR PERSONAL UV EXPOSURE MEASUREMENTS

Guive Balooch; Rafal M. Pielak; Yunzhou Shi


Archive | 2017

Dispositif et système pour mesures individuelles d'exposition aux uv

Yunzhou Shi; Rafal M. Pielak; Guive Balooch

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