Timothy Ingram Cox
Qinetiq
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Publication
Featured researches published by Timothy Ingram Cox.
ACS Nano | 2010
Geoffrey J. Ashwell; Laurie J. Phillips; Benjamin Robinson; Barbara Urasinska-Wojcik; Colin J. Lambert; Iain Grace; Martin R. Bryce; Rukkiat Jitchati; Mustafa Tavasli; Timothy Ingram Cox; Ian Charles Sage; Rachel Tuffin; Shona Ray
The highly doped electrodes of a vertical silicon nanogap device have been bridged by a 5.85 nm long molecular wire, which was synthesized in situ by grafting 4-ethynylbenzaldehyde via C-Si links to the top and bottom electrodes and thereafter by coupling an amino-terminated fluorene unit to the aldehyde groups of the activated electrode surfaces. The number of bridging molecules is constrained by relying on surface roughness to match the 5.85 nm length with an electrode gap that is nominally 1 nm wider and may be controlled by varying the reaction time: the device current increases from ≤1 pA at 1 V following the initial grafting step to 10-100 nA at 1 V when reacted for 5-15 min with the amino-terminated linker and 10 μA when reacted for 16-53 h. It is the first time that both ends of a molecular wire have been directly grafted to silicon electrodes, and these molecule-induced changes are reversible. The bridges detach when the device is rinsed with dilute acid solution, which breaks the imine links of the in situ formed wire and causes the current to revert to the subpicoampere leakage value of the 4-ethynylbenzaldehyde-grafted nanogap structure.
Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2013
Roy M. Pemberton; Timothy Ingram Cox; Rachel Tuffin; Ian Charles Sage; G.A. Drago; N. Biddle; John Griffiths; Robin Pittson; Graham Johnson; Jinsheng Xu; Simon K. Jackson; G. Kenna; Richard Luxton; John P. Hart
A water-based carbon screen-printing ink formulation, containing the redox mediator cobalt phthalocyanine (CoPC) and the enzyme glucose oxidase (GOx), was investigated for its suitability to fabricate glucose microbiosensors in a 96-well microplate format: (1) the biosensor ink was dip-coated onto a platinum (Pt) wire electrode, leading to satisfactory amperometric performance; (2) the ink was deposited onto the surface of a series of Pt microelectrodes (10-500 μm diameter) fabricated on a silicon substrate using MEMS (microelectromechanical systems) microfabrication techniques: capillary deposition proved to be successful; a Pt microdisc electrode of ≥100 μm was required for optimum biosensor performance; (3) MEMS processing was used to fabricate suitably sized metal (Pt) tracks and pads onto a silicon 96 well format base chip, and the glucose biosensor ink was screen-printed onto these pads to create glucose microbiosensors. When formed into microwells, using a 340 μl volume of buffer, the microbiosensors produced steady-state amperometric responses which showed linearity up to 5 mM glucose (CV=6% for n=5 biosensors). When coated, using an optimised protocol, with collagen in order to aid cell adhesion, the biosensors continued to show satisfactory performance in culture medium (linear range to 2 mM, dynamic range to 7 mM, CV=5.7% for n=4 biosensors). Finally, the operation of these collagen-coated microbiosensors, in 5-well 96-well format microwells, was tested using a 5-channel multipotentiostat. A relationship between amperometric response due to glucose, and cell number in the microwells, was observed. These results indicate that microphotolithography and screen-printing techniques can be combined successfully to produce microbiosensors capable of monitoring glucose metabolism in 96 well format cell cultures. The potential application areas for these microbiosensors are discussed.
Sensors | 2014
Roy M. Pemberton; Timothy Ingram Cox; Rachel Tuffin; G.A. Drago; John Griffiths; Robin Pittson; Graham Johnson; Jinsheng Xu; Ian Charles Sage; Rhodri Davies; Simon K. Jackson; Gerry Kenna; Richard Luxton; John P. Hart
This report describes the design and development of an integrated electrochemical cell culture monitoring system, based on enzyme-biosensors and chemical sensors, for monitoring indicators of mammalian cell metabolic status. MEMS technology was used to fabricate a microwell-format silicon platform including a thermometer, onto which chemical sensors (pH, O2) and screen-printed biosensors (glucose, lactate), were grafted/deposited. Microwells were formed over the fabricated sensors to give 5-well sensor strips which were interfaced with a multipotentiostat via a bespoke connector box interface. The operation of each sensor/biosensor type was examined individually, and examples of operating devices in five microwells in parallel, in either potentiometric (pH sensing) or amperometric (glucose biosensing) mode are shown. The performance characteristics of the sensors/biosensors indicate that the system could readily be applied to cell culture/toxicity studies.
Angewandte Chemie | 2011
Geoffrey J. Ashwell; Laurie J. Phillips; Benjamin Robinson; Susan A. Barnes; Aled Williams; Barbara Urasinska-Wojcik; Colin J. Lambert; Iain Grace; Timothy Ingram Cox; Ian Charles Sage
Silicon nanogaps were bridged in situ by grafting 4-ethynylbenzaldehyde to activate the electrodes and coupling 2,6-diaminoanthra-9,10-quinone to link the coatings. The bridged structures exhibit currents of 11-14 nA at 1 V. The process is reversed by soaking in acidified solution, which causes the current to diminish. Copyright
Lab on a Chip | 2005
Oliver Hofmann; Kirk Murray; Alan-Shaun Wilkinson; Timothy Ingram Cox; Andreas Manz
We report on the development of a laser based spore disruption method. Bacillus globigii spores were mixed with a laser light absorbing matrix and co-crystallized into 200-microm-wide and 20-microm-deep nanovials formed in a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) target plate. Surface tension effects were exploited to effect up to 125-fold spore enrichment. When the target zones were illuminated at atmospheric pressure with pulsed UV-laser light at fluences below 20 mJ cm(-2) a change in spore morphology was observed within seconds. Post illumination PCR analysis suggests the release of endogenous DNA indicative of spore disruption. For laser fluences above 20 mJ cm(-2), desorption of spores and fragments was also observed even without a matrix being employed. Desorbed material was collected in a PDMS flowcell attached to the target plate during laser illumination. This opens up a route towards the direct extraction of released DNA in an integrated spore disruption-PCR amplification microchip device.
Archive | 1999
Leigh Trevor Canham; Timothy Ingram Cox; Christopher Leslie Reeves
Archive | 1999
Leigh T. Canham; Christopher P. Barrett; Timothy Ingram Cox; Peter J. Wright; Andrew P. Bowditch
Archive | 1992
Leigh T. Canham; Weng Yee Leong; Timothy Ingram Cox
Archive | 1996
Leigh Trevor Canham; Timothy Ingram Cox; Armando QinetiQ Limited Loni; Andrew John Simons; Richard Simon Blacker
Archive | 2008
David Johnathon Combes; Timothy Ingram Cox; Ian Charles Sage