Spatiotemporal molecular tracing of ultralow-volume biofluids via a soft skin-adaptive optical monolithic patch sensor

  • Yeon Soo Lee
  • , Seyoung Shin
  • , Gyun Ro Kang
  • , Siyeon Lee
  • , Da Wan Kim
  • , Seongcheol Park
  • , Youngwook Cho
  • , Dohyun Lim
  • , Seung Hwan Jeon
  • , Soo Yeon Cho
  • , Changhyun Pang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Molecular tracing of extremely low amounts of biofluids is vital for precise diagnostic analysis. Although optical nanosensors for real-time spatiotemporal molecular tracing exist, integrating them into simple devices that capture low-volume fluids on rough, dynamic surfaces remains challenging. We present a bioinspired 3D microstructured patch monolithically integrated with optical nanosensors (3D MIN) for real-time, multivariate molecular tracing of ultralow-volume fluids. Inspired by tree frog toe pads, the 3D MIN features soft, hexagonally aligned pillars and microchannels for conformal adhesion and targeted fluid management. Embedding near-infrared fluorescent single-walled carbon nanotube nanosensors in a hydrogel enables simultaneous fluid capture and detection. Softening the elastomer microarchitecture and optimizing water management promote stable adhesion on wet biosurfaces, allowing rapid collection of ultralow-volume fluids (~0.1 µL/min·cm²). We demonstrate real-time, remote sweat analysis with ≥75 nL volumes collected in 45 s, without exercise or iontophoresis, showcasing high biocompatibility and efficient spatiotemporal molecular tracing.

Original languageEnglish
Article number3272
JournalNature Communications
Volume16
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2025

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