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Dive into the research topics where Somayeh Imani is active.

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Featured researches published by Somayeh Imani.


Nature Communications | 2016

A wearable chemical–electrophysiological hybrid biosensing system for real-time health and fitness monitoring

Somayeh Imani; Amay J. Bandodkar; A. M. Vinu Mohan; Rajan Kumar; Shengfei Yu; Joseph Wang; Patrick P. Mercier

Flexible, wearable sensing devices can yield important information about the underlying physiology of a human subject for applications in real-time health and fitness monitoring. Despite significant progress in the fabrication of flexible biosensors that naturally comply with the epidermis, most designs measure only a small number of physical or electrophysiological parameters, and neglect the rich chemical information available from biomarkers. Here, we introduce a skin-worn wearable hybrid sensing system that offers simultaneous real-time monitoring of a biochemical (lactate) and an electrophysiological signal (electrocardiogram), for more comprehensive fitness monitoring than from physical or electrophysiological sensors alone. The two sensing modalities, comprising a three-electrode amperometric lactate biosensor and a bipolar electrocardiogram sensor, are co-fabricated on a flexible substrate and mounted on the skin. Human experiments reveal that physiochemistry and electrophysiology can be measured simultaneously with negligible cross-talk, enabling a new class of hybrid sensing devices.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2015

Wearable salivary uric acid mouthguard biosensor with integrated wireless electronics

Jayoung Kim; Somayeh Imani; William R. de Araujo; Julian Warchall; Gabriela Valdés-Ramírez; Thiago R.L.C. Paixão; Patrick P. Mercier; Joseph Wang

This article demonstrates an instrumented mouthguard capable of non-invasively monitoring salivary uric acid (SUA) levels. The enzyme (uricase)-modified screen printed electrode system has been integrated onto a mouthguard platform along with anatomically-miniaturized instrumentation electronics featuring a potentiostat, microcontroller, and a Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) transceiver. Unlike RFID-based biosensing systems, which require large proximal power sources, the developed platform enables real-time wireless transmission of the sensed information to standard smartphones, laptops, and other consumer electronics for on-demand processing, diagnostics, or storage. The mouthguard biosensor system offers high sensitivity, selectivity, and stability towards uric acid detection in human saliva, covering the concentration ranges for both healthy people and hyperuricemia patients. The new wireless mouthguard biosensor system is able to monitor SUA level in real-time and continuous fashion, and can be readily expanded to an array of sensors for different analytes to enable an attractive wearable monitoring system for diverse health and fitness applications.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2014

Wearable textile biofuel cells for powering electronics

Wenzhao Jia; Xuan Wang; Somayeh Imani; Amay J. Bandodkar; Julian Ramírez; Patrick P. Mercier; Joseph Wang

The fabrication and performance of a wearable biofuel cell printed directly onto textile substrates are reported. The textile biofuel cell utilizes physiologically produced sweat lactate as the fuel to generate electrical energy, producing up to 100 μW cm−2 at 0.34 V during in vitro experimentation, even after repeated bending stress. Furthermore, the wearable and flexible biofuel cell can be easily integrated with a portable energy storage device for on-demand powering of wearable electronics. To validate energy harvesting, the biofuel cell is integrated into a headband and a wristband, and with the help of an on-board DC/DC converter, extracts energy from perspiring human subjects for direct powering of an LED or a digital watch. Convenient incorporation and removal from a variety of garments are achieved by printing the biofuel cell on a detachable care label. Such textile-based non-invasive biofuel cells can be expected to serve in the future as the power unit for wearable electronics and biomedical devices.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2017

Soft, stretchable, high power density electronic skin-based biofuel cells for scavenging energy from human sweat

Amay J. Bandodkar; Jung-Min You; NamHeon Kim; Yue Gu; Rajan Kumar; A. M. Vinu Mohan; Jonas F. Kurniawan; Somayeh Imani; Tatsuo Nakagawa; Brianna Parish; Mukunth Parthasarathy; Patrick P. Mercier; Sheng Xu; Joseph Wang

This article describes the fabrication, characterization, and real-life application of a soft, stretchable electronic-skin-based biofuel cell (E-BFC) that exhibits an open circuit voltage of 0.5 V and a power density of nearly 1.2 mW cm−2 at 0.2 V, representing the highest power density recorded by a wearable biofuel cell to date. High power density is achieved via a unique combination of lithographically-patterned stretchable electronic framework together with screen-printed, densely-packed three-dimensional carbon-nanotube-based bioanode and cathode array arranged in a stretchable “island-bridge” configuration. The E-BFC maintains its performance even under repeated strains of 50%, and is stable for two days. When applied directly to the skin of human subjects, the E-BFC generates ∼1 mW during exercise. The E-BFC is able to power conventional electronic devices, such as a light emitting diode and a Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) radio. This is the first example of powering a BLE radio by a wearable biofuel cell. Successful generation of high power density under practical conditions and powering of conventional energy-intense electronic devices represents a major step forward in the field of soft, stretchable, wearable energy harvesting devices.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2018

Re-usable electrochemical glucose sensors integrated into a smartphone platform

Amay J. Bandodkar; Somayeh Imani; Rogelio Nuñez-Flores; Rajan Kumar; Chiyi Wang; A. M. Vinu Mohan; Joseph Wang; Patrick P. Mercier

This article demonstrates a new smartphone-based reusable glucose meter. The glucose meter includes a custom-built smartphone case that houses a permanent bare sensor strip, a stylus that is loaded with enzyme-carbon composite pellets, and sensor instrumentation circuits. A custom-designed Android-based software application was developed to enable easy and clear display of measured glucose concentration. A typical test involves the user loading the software, using the stylus to dispense an enzymatic pellet on top of the bare sensor strip affixed to the case, and then introducing the sample. The electronic module then acquires and wirelessly transmits the data to the application software to be displayed on the screen. The deployed pellet is then discarded to regain the fresh bare sensor surface. Such a unique working principle allows the system to overcome challenges faced by previously reported reusable sensors, such as enzyme degradation, leaching, and hysteresis effects. Studies reveal that the enzyme loaded in the pellets are stable for up to 8 months at ambient conditions, and generate reproducible sensor signals. The work illustrates the significance of the pellet-based sensing system towards realizing a reusable, point-of-care sensor that snugly fits around a smartphone and which does not face issues usually common to reusable sensors. The versatility of this system allows it to be easily modified to detect other analytes for application in a wide range of healthcare, environmental and defense domains.


international symposium on circuits and systems | 2016

Wearable chemical sensors: Opportunities and challenges

Somayeh Imani; Patrick P. Mercier; Amay J. Bandodkar; Jayoung Kim; Joseph Wang

Wearable systems show considerable promise in monitoring and assessing the real-time performance of athletes, the health status of patients, or the general well-being of interested users. Most wearables today focus on monitoring physical parameters (e.g., activity, respiration rate, etc.), or electrophysiology (e.g., ECG, EEG, etc.). In order to augment the richness of collected data, the next-generation of wearables will also be capable of monitoring underlying chemical homeostatis of the user, for example through measurement of glucose in interstitial fluid, lactate in saliva, or electrolytes in sweat. This paper discusses the challenges of building wearable chemical biosensors, including biosensor functionalization, flexible material engineering, bioelectronic integration, and data analytics.


Advanced Science | 2018

Simultaneous Monitoring of Sweat and Interstitial Fluid Using a Single Wearable Biosensor Platform

Jayoung Kim; Juliane R. Sempionatto; Somayeh Imani; Martin C. Hartel; Abbas Barfidokht; Guangda Tang; Alan S. Campbell; Patrick P. Mercier; Joseph Wang

Abstract The development of wearable biosensors for continuous noninvasive monitoring of target biomarkers is limited to assays of a single sampled biofluid. An example of simultaneous noninvasive sampling and analysis of two different biofluids using a single wearable epidermal platform is demonstrated here. The concept is successfully realized through sweat stimulation (via transdermal pilocarpine delivery) at an anode, alongside extraction of interstitial fluid (ISF) at a cathode. The system thus allows on‐demand, controlled sampling of the two epidermal biofluids at the same time, at two physically separate locations (on the same flexible platform) containing different electrochemical biosensors for monitoring the corresponding biomarkers. Such a dual biofluid sampling and analysis concept is implemented using a cost‐effective screen‐printing technique with body‐compliant temporary tattoo materials and conformal wireless readout circuits to enable real‐time measurement of biomarkers in the sampled epidermal biofluids. The performance of the developed wearable device is demonstrated by measuring sweat‐alcohol and ISF‐glucose in human subjects consuming food and alcoholic drinks. The different compositions of sweat and ISF with good correlations of their chemical constituents to their blood levels make the developed platform extremely attractive for enhancing the power and scope of next‐generation noninvasive epidermal biosensing systems.


ACS Sensors | 2016

Noninvasive Alcohol Monitoring Using a Wearable Tattoo-Based Iontophoretic-Biosensing System

Jayoung Kim; Itthipon Jeerapan; Somayeh Imani; Thomas N. Cho; Amay J. Bandodkar; Stefano Cinti; Patrick P. Mercier; Joseph Wang


Lab on a Chip | 2017

Eyeglasses based wireless electrolyte and metabolite sensor platform

Juliane R. Sempionatto; Tatsuo Nakagawa; Adriana Pavinatto; Samantha T. Mensah; Somayeh Imani; Patrick P. Mercier; Joseph Wang


international solid-state circuits conference | 2018

A 0.3V biofuel-cell-powered glucose/lactate biosensing system employing a 180nW 64dB SNR passive δς ADC and a 920MHz wireless transmitter

Ali Fazli Yeknami; Xiaoyang Wang; Somayeh Imani; Ali Nikoofard; Itthipon Jeerapan; Joseph Wang; Patrick P. Mercier

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Joseph Wang

University of California

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Jayoung Kim

University of California

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Rajan Kumar

University of California

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Ali Nikoofard

University of California

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