M

Miguel M. Erenas

Universidad de Granada

ORCID: 0000-0002-5616-1749

Publishes on Biosensors and Analytical Detection, Analytical Chemistry and Sensors, Advanced Chemical Sensor Technologies. 58 papers and 2k citations.

58Publications
2kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Smartphone-Based Simultaneous pH and Nitrite Colorimetric Determination for Paper Microfluidic Devices
Nuria López-Ruiz, Vincenzo F. Curto, Miguel M. Erenas et al.|Analytical Chemistry|2014
Cited by 418Open Access

In this work, an Android application for measurement of nitrite concentration and pH determination in combination with a low-cost paper-based microfluidic device is presented. The application uses seven sensing areas, containing the corresponding immobilized reagents, to produce selective color changes when a sample solution is placed in the sampling area. Under controlled conditions of light, using the flash of the smartphone as a light source, the image captured with the built-in camera is processed using a customized algorithm for multidetection of the colored sensing areas. The developed image-processing allows reducing the influence of the light source and the positioning of the microfluidic device in the picture. Then, the H (hue) and S (saturation) coordinates of the HSV color space are extracted and related to pH and nitrite concentration, respectively. A complete characterization of the sensing elements has been carried out as well as a full description of the image analysis for detection. The results show good use of a mobile phone as an analytical instrument. For the pH, the resolution obtained is 0.04 units of pH, 0.09 of accuracy, and a mean squared error of 0.167. With regard to nitrite, 0.51% at 4.0 mg L(-1) of resolution and 0.52 mg L(-1) as the limit of detection was achieved.

Use of the Hue Parameter of the Hue, Saturation, Value Color Space As a Quantitative Analytical Parameter for Bitonal Optical Sensors
Kevin Cantrell, Miguel M. Erenas, Ignacio de Orbe-Payá et al.|Analytical Chemistry|2009
Cited by 270

The hue or H component of the hue, saturation, value (HSV) color space has been studied as a quantitative analytical parameter for bitonal optical sensors. The robust nature of this parameter provides superior precision for the measurement of sensors which change colors with the speciation of some indicator molecule. This parameter has been compared to red, green, blue (RGB) intensity and RGB absorbance along with differences and ratios of both intensity and absorbance and has been demonstrated to be 2 to 3 times superior. The H value maintains this superior precision with variations in indicator concentration, membrane thickness, detector spectral responsivity, and illumination. Because this parameter is stable, simple to calculate, easily obtained from commercial devices such as scanners and digital cameras, continuous over the entire color gamut, and bound between values of 0 and 1, it shows great promise for use in a variety of sensing applications including imaging, automated analysis, pharmaceutical sensing, lab-on-a-chip devices, and quality control applications.

Flexible Passive near Field Communication Tag for Multigas Sensing
Pablo Escobedo, Miguel M. Erenas, Nuria López-Ruiz et al.|Analytical Chemistry|2016
Cited by 94Open Access

In this work we present a full-passive flexible multigas sensing tag for the determination of oxygen, carbon dioxide, ammonia, and relative humidity readable by a smartphone. This tag is based on near field communication (NFC) technology for energy harvesting and data transmission to a smartphone. The gas sensors show an optic response that is read through high-resolution digital color detectors. A white LED is used as the common optical excitation source for all the sensors. Only a reduced electronics with very low power consumption is required for the reading of the optical responses and data transmission to a remote user. An application for the Android operating system has been developed for the power supplying and data reception from the tag. The responses of the sensors have been calibrated and fitted to simple functions, allowing a fast prediction of the gases concentration. Cross-sensitivity has also been evaluated, finding that in most of the cases it is negligible or easily correctable using the rest of the readings. The election of the target gases has been due to their importance in the monitoring of modified atmosphere packaging. The resolutions and limits of detection measured are suitable for such kinds of applications.