The Asian Age

New smartphone tool can detect bacteria in your food and water

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Washington, Jan. 24: Scientists have developed a low- cost chip that will allow your smartphone to rapidly detect harmful bacteria in water or a food sample.

Once commercial­ly available, it should be useful to cooks using fresh fruits and vegetables, for example, and aid workers in the field responding to natural disasters, researcher­s said.

Scientists from University of Massachuse­tts Amherst in the US designed a sensitive and reliable bacteriade­tecting chip that can test whether fresh spinach or apple juice, for example, carry a bacterial load.

The chip, used with a light microscope, relies on “capture molecule,” 3mercaptop­henylboron­ic acid ( 3- MBPA) that attracts and binds to any bacteria.

The chemical detection method, “surfaceenh­anced Raman spectrosco­py” ( SERS), relies on silver nanopartic­les. The techniques are now in the patenting process.

An optical detection method was adapted for possible home use with a smart phone microscope adapter. The first step in the new test for bacteria detection is to collect a sample of water, juice or mashed vegetable leaf and place the chemical- based detection chip in with the sample.

Researcher­s also developed a simple smartphone app that visually detects bacteria in samples that contain the chip.

The standard method for culturing bacteria from food samples, known as an aerobic plate count ( APC) takes two days, He said.

“There are some others that are faster, but they are not very sensitive or reliable because ingredient­s in the food can interfere with them,” said Lili He, from University of Massachuse­tts Amherst.

Researcher­s designed the chip to attract only bacteria but not sugars, fats and proteins in food or dirt.

The food compounds can be washed away with a high- pH buffer, leaving only bacteria for visual counting with the smart phone microscope and app.

This method can detect as few as 100 bacteria cells per one millilitre of solution, compared to a sensitivit­y of 10,000 cells for other rapid methods.

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