Researcher: Özkahraman, Ecem Ezgi
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Özkahraman, Ecem Ezgi
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Publication Metadata only Femtosecond laser ablation assisted nfc antenna fabrication for smart contact lenses(Wiley, 2022) N/A; Department of Mechanical Engineering; Department of Mechanical Engineering; N/A; N/A; N/A; N/A; Department of Mechanical Engineering; Mirzajani, Hadi; İstif, Emin; Abbasiasl, Taher; Mirlou, Fariborz; Özkahraman, Ecem Ezgi; Hasanreisoğlu, Murat; Beker, Levent; Researcher; Other; PhD Student; PhD Student; N/A; Faculty Member; Faculty Member; Department of Mechanical Engineering; Koç University Research Center for Translational Medicine (KUTTAM) / Koç Üniversitesi Translasyonel Tıp Araştırma Merkezi (KUTTAM); n2STAR-Koç University Nanofabrication and Nanocharacterization Center for Scientifc and Technological Advanced Research; College of Engineering; College of Engineering; Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering; Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering; N/A; School of Medicine; College of Engineering; N/A; N/A; N/A; N/A; N/A; 182001; 308798Smart contact lenses (SCLs) have drawn substantial interest for continuous health monitoring applications. Even though most of the reported works utilize near-field communication (NFC) or inductive coupling for wireless powering and data transmission, developing a scalable and rapid fabrication technique for annular ring antennas confined in a small contact lens area is still an unsolved challenge. Here, femtosecond laser ablation is employed for the first time as a simple, single-step, and highly precise fabrication technique for NFC antennas using conventional flexible printed circuit board materials. Antenna lines with depth and width of 9 and 35 mu m are achieved, respectively. The antenna with a footprint of 19.5 mm(2) is characterized in biological solution followed by aging, and bending tests, and a frequency deviation of less than %1 is recorded. A real-life application is demonstrated by fabricating an SCL embedded with the antenna, an NFC chip, and an electrochemical sensor for wireless monitoring of glucose in artificial tear solution by a smartphone. The device could successfully quantify biologically relevant glucose concentrations ranging from 0.2 to 1 mM with a limit-of-detection of 66 mu M. In addition, device response to interfering molecules is less than +/- 1 nA, and the spike-and-recovery test is successfully demonstrated.