The first step to addressing any problem is to know it is there. When that problem is microscopic, such as the presence of unwanted microbes in waste water, lactate in human sweat, or contaminants in pharmaceuticals, detecting that presence often requires sophisticated laboratory tests. As a biochemical engineer, Chen Jianlin, Associate Professor of Applied Science at Hong Kong Metropolitan University (HKMU), can run tests in a laboratory without difficulty. However, he knew it would be a lot more help if the tests could be taken out of the lab and right to the site of the problem. This could speed up diagnosis, and get vital, perhaps even lifesaving, information immediately into the hands of those who need it.
Chen's research focuses on biosensors, devices that measure biological or chemical reactions by generating signals proportional to the concentration of the substance under analysis. Having worked on environmental protection research projects in the highly controlled environment of a university laboratory, Chen could see that there was a real need to be able to run tests in the field, rather than having to send samples off to a laboratory and wait for the results.
One example is wastewater treatment. Anaerobic treatment is used to deal with heavily polluted water, via microbes which degrade organic matter in an oxygen-free environment, converting it into methane in the process. The balance of microbes is crucial, and the process is highly sensitive to adverse contaminants. Detecting their presence in influent, before they go into the water treatment system, is key to maintaining the right balance.
Typically, measuring this requires sending samples to a laboratory for testing. “It's a process that uses a lot of very expensive equipment and it takes at least two days,” explains Chen. “If you can measure at the site, immediately, the benefit is huge. Firstly it's time-saving, and secondly, once you have the information that a batch of influent is contaminated, you can, for example, change the tank parameters, and use some buffering techniques to contain the influent.”
The technology behind this biosensor is highly sophisticated, but Chen wanted the process to be as simple as the high school chemistry class pH test, with a reagent strip. “So the design idea came from that; I wanted to know if I could use a paper strip, drop the liquid onto it, then get the result several minutes later, half an hour at most,” he explains. The test results come out in the form of colour changes similar to a pH test, and it uses a smartphone app to ensure an accurate read of the colour change information. “This cannot treat the problem, but it can tell people there’s a problem and can prove it unequivocally and quickly,” says Chen.
With a career starting out in environmental engineering, Chen's interest in finding practical applications for biosensors has also taken him into the medical field, including a simplified, portable and highly sensitive assay that can, within minutes, detect various bio-toxic agents, such as Enterococcus faecalis, a bacterium commonly found in the human gastrointestinal tract that can cause serious healthcare-associated infections.