Foldscope: An origami microscope that will revolutionize disease surveillance


In a paper published in ArXiv entitled Foldscope: Origami-based paper microscope, Manu Prakash (Assistant Professor of Bioengineering at Stanford) and colleagues detail an approach for creating low cost brightfield, darkfield, and fluorescence microscopes that could revolution field testing for infectious diseases. These inexpensive microscopes (less than one dollar each) could be printed by the thousands and could be widely used as a medical screening tool in the developing world.

Abstract 
“Here we describe an ultra-low-cost origami-based approach for large-scale manufacturing of microscopes, specifically demonstrating brightfield, darkfield, and fluorescence microscopes. Merging principles of optical design with origami enables high-volume fabrication of microscopes from 2D media. Flexure mechanisms created via folding enable a flat compact design. Structural loops in folded paper provide kinematic constraints as a means for passive self-alignment. This light, rugged instrument can survive harsh field conditions while providing a diversity of imaging capabilities, thus serving wide-ranging applications for cost-effective, portable microscopes in science and education.”

Link: arXiv:1403.1211 [physics.optics]

See Manu Prakash’s 2012 TED talk: A 50-cent microscope that folds like origami

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Spread of H7N9 in China

What is happening with H7N9 in China?

The Current Status of the 2016 – 2017 H7N9 Outbreak in China as of March 1, 2017 (Is the Outbreak Just About Over?)