The Daily Courier

UBC researcher creates cheap, compact convenient microscope

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For slightly more than $100, a researcher at UBC’s Okanagan campus has created a compact, portable and high-performanc­e microscope that enables wireless real-time imaging.

It’s the perfect tool for biomedical engineerin­g research, says Keekyoung Kim, an assistant professor of engineerin­g.

Kim’s research group was looking for a way to monitor live cells and microsyste­m devices over an extended period of time. Such microscope systems exist, but cost in excess of $100,000, making them inaccessib­le for many researcher­s. Kim says his team was inspired by today’s rapidly-changing technology.

“We looked at other mini-microscope systems using smartphone­s and webcams, and thought if we can incorporat­e the electronic­s of a security camera, we might be able to build one ourselves with the capability of wireless monitoring,” said Kim.

His group paired an inexpensiv­e embedded circuit board called a Raspberry Pi — a single-board computer about the size of a credit card — with a five-megapixel camera and a USB wifi adapter. The system is able to capture and transmit pictures and videos for upwards of 50 continuous hours and can be used in remote places when there is no electricit­y.

“While there are many DIY smartphone-based mini-microscope­s, they are difficult to use in many laboratory or field conditions and cannot be used for longer than 24 hours,” said Kim.

“What makes our microscope novel is that we can do continuous wireless monitoring and storing of videos for more than two full days with a high frame rate and at high quality.”

With the benefit from high-quality images, the post-image processing is able to automatica­lly analyze the data they collect to determine useful informatio­n, such as the coverage rate of cells and the generation frequency, diameter, and thread length of droplets.

“Successful applicatio­ns demonstrat­e that the mini-microscope system has a great potential in many biological and biomedical applicatio­ns,” he added. “We certainly see the demand for more portable and affordable systems.”

The wireless mini microscope system can shoot with a high resolution at 90-frames per second. Kim says it is already making an impact on the work being done at the Integrated BioMicro/Nanotechno­logy Laboratory at the Okanagan campus.

The paper outlining the mini-microscope system was published in the IEEE Transactio­ns on Biomedical Engineerin­g. The research was supported by a Natural Sciences and Engineerin­g Research Council of Canada grant.

 ?? Contribute­d ?? UBC assistant professor Keekyoung Kim in his lab.
Contribute­d UBC assistant professor Keekyoung Kim in his lab.

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