A sensitive and compact optical detector based on lock-in amplification

04 August 2021, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

We report a sensitive, fixed-wavelength, lock-in-based optical detector built from a light-emitting diode, two colour filters, a photodetector, a small number of discrete analogue components, and a low-cost microcontroller development board. We describe the construction, operating principle, use and performance of the optical detector, which may be used for both absorption- and fluorescence- measurements in either a 10-mm pathlength cuvette or a low-volume (< 100 μl) flow-cell. For illustrative purposes the detector is applied here to a cholesterol assay based on the enzyme-mediated conversion of (non-emissive) Amplex Red into the fluorescent dye resorufin, providing a detection limit of ~200 nM – some four orders of magnitude lower than the typical concentration of cholesterol in human serum. (The resorufin molecule itself is detectable down to concentrations of ~20 nM). The system may be readily adapted to other biomolecules through a simple change of enzyme.

Keywords

Bioassays
fluorescence
3D printing
open hardware
digital signal processing
lock-in

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Title
Supporting Information: A sensitive and compact optical detector based on lock-in amplification
Description
PDF file containing spectral characteristics of optical components, full circuit diagram, details on signal conditioning circuit and brief explanation of lock-in detection.
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