Battery-free, tuning circuit-inspired wireless sensor systems for detection of multiple biomarkers in bodily fluids

Sci Adv. 2022 Jul 8;8(27):eabo7049. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.abo7049. Epub 2022 Jul 6.

Abstract

Tracking the concentration of biomarkers in biofluids can provide crucial information about health status. However, the complexity and nonideal form factors of conventional digital wireless schemes impose challenges in realizing biointegrated, lightweight, and miniaturized sensors. Inspired by the working principle of tuning circuits in radio frequency electronics, this study reports a class of battery-free wireless biochemical sensors: In a resonance circuit, the coupling between a sensing interface and an inductor-capacitor oscillator through a pair of varactor diodes converts a change in electric potential into a modulation in capacitance, resulting in a quantifiable shift of the resonance circuit. Proper design of sensing interfaces with biorecognition elements enables the detection of various biomarkers, including ions, neurotransmitters, and metabolites. Demonstrations of "smart accessories" and miniaturized probes suggest the broad utility of this circuit model. The design concepts and sensing strategies provide a realistic pathway to building biointegrated electronics for wireless biochemical sensing.