News Story
Diagnostic anSERS Takes 3rd and UMD Prize at Cupid's Cup Finals
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Fischell Department of Bioengineering graduate students and Diagnostic anSERS cofounders Eric Hoppmann (left) and Sean Virgile (right).
The company received a total of $10,000, which they will use to scale up manufacturing for a product release this fall. Diagnostic anSERS produces inexpensive paper substrates for surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS), a molecular fingerprinting technique, using a modified inkjet printer and silver-laced ink.
Diagnostic anSERS says its product will make advanced sensor technology available to more people, both in the lab and in the field, because it uses off-the-shelf technology and other readily available components. The printed sensors, which can be produced on-demand and on location by anyone who has had some basic instruction, are used to detect trace amounts of explosives, toxins and narcotics.
"Our $4 piece of paper is able to perform better than our $105 competitor," says Virgile.
VIDEO: Sean Virgile explains his company's product (courtesy of the Cupid's Cup competition):
The Alumni Association covered Diagnostic anSERS and its participation in the Cupid's Cup in a recent article titled "Bioengineering Students Create Inexpensive Contaminant Test Strip."
Published April 8, 2013