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Download fileHigh-Content Optical Codes for Protecting Rapid Diagnostic Tests from Counterfeiting
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posted on 2018-06-08, 10:48 authored by Onur Gökçe, Cristina Mercandetti, Emmanuel DelamarcheWarnings and reports on counterfeit
diagnostic devices are released
several times a year by regulators and public health agencies. Unfortunately,
mishandling, altering, and counterfeiting point-of-care diagnostics
(POCDs) and rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) is lucrative, relatively
simple and can lead to devastating consequences. Here, we demonstrate
how to implement optical security codes in silicon- and nitrocellulose-based
flow paths for device authentication using a smartphone. The codes
are created by inkjet spotting inks directly on nitrocellulose or
on micropillars. Codes containing up to 32 elements per mm2 and 8 colors can encode as many as 1045 combinations.
Codes on silicon micropillars can be erased by setting a continuous
flow path across the entire array of code elements or for nitrocellulose
by simply wicking a liquid across the code. Static or labile code
elements can further be formed on nitrocellulose to create a hidden
code using poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) or glycerol additives to the
inks. More advanced codes having a specific deletion sequence can
also be created in silicon microfluidic devices using an array of
passive routing nodes, which activate in a particular, programmable
sequence. Such codes are simple to fabricate, easy to view, and efficient
in coding information; they can be ideally used in combination with
information on a package to protect diagnostic devices from counterfeiting.