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Scientific Program
11th Euro Biosensors & Bioelectronics Congress, will be organized around the theme “Ground breaking ways to win the lives through biotechnology”
EURO BIOSENSORS 2019 is comprised of 15 tracks and 123 sessions designed to offer comprehensive sessions that address current issues in EURO BIOSENSORS 2019.
Submit your abstract to any of the mentioned tracks. All related abstracts are accepted.
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The term “biosensor” is short for “biological sensor.” A biosensor is an analytical device which converts a biological response into an electrical signal. The device is made up of a transducer and a biological element that may be an enzyme, an antibody or a nucleic acid. The bio element interacts with the analyte being tested and the biological response is converted into an electrical signal by the transducer. Electrochemical biosensors are normally based on enzymatic catalysis of a reaction that produces or consumes electrons (such enzymes are rightly called redox enzymes). Amperometric biosensors are self-contained integrated devices based on the measurement of the current resulting from the oxidation or reduction of an electro active biological element providing specific quantitative analytical information. They generally have response times, dynamic ranges and sensitivities similar to the potentiometric biosensors. A potentiometric biosensor can be defined as a device incorporating a biological sensing element connected to an electrochemical potential transducer. Potentiometric biosensors usually rely on a biochemical reaction leading to simpler chemical specie and its subsequent electrochemical detection. The analytical signal generated by a potentiometric biosensor is an electrical potential. An electrochemical biosensor is a self-contained integrated device, which is capable of providing specific quantitative or semi-quantitative analytical information using a biological recognition element (biochemical receptor) which is retained in direct spatial contact with an electrochemical transduction element.
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- Track 1-1Amperometric Biosensors
- Track 1-2Biodetection
- Track 1-3Biosecurity
- Track 1-4Biocomputing
- Track 1-5Biofuel cells
- Track 1-6Electronic noses
- Track 1-7Microfluidics
- Track 1-8Potentiometric Biosensors
- Track 1-9Recent advances in Biosensors
- Track 1-10Security and Sensing
Bio-sensing technologies are of increasing importance in healthcare, agri-food, environmental and security sectors, and this is reflected in the continued growth of global markets for such technologies. Biomechanics is closely related to engineering, because it often uses traditional engineering sciences to analyze biological systems. Some simple applications of Newtonian mechanics and/or materials sciences can supply correct approximations to the mechanics of many biological systems. Reliable methodologies are needed for point and stand-off detection of chemical, biological, radiological, special nuclear and explosive (CBRNE) materials. These technological needs are not universally military in nature. For example, there is pervasive interest among diverse disciplines such as medicine, law enforcement, explosive ordinance disposal, Natural environmental protection, industrial manufacturing and food processing in being able to develop capabilities for the rapid detection and identification capabilities for various biochemical markers. The major features required to develop a commercially successful bio-sensing technology are represented as follows: 1. Novel biomarkers 2. Biosensor surfaces 3. Novel detection technologies 4. Instrumentation and Integration 5. Commercialization and impact
- Track 2-1Biosensing Devices in Biodetection
- Track 2-2Biosensor interface
- Track 2-3CBRNE sensing (chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, ecological)
- Track 2-4Integrated systems
- Track 2-5Mobile diagnostics and personal health
- Track 2-6Novel biomarkers
- Track 2-7Novel detection technologies
- Track 2-8Novel detection technologies
- Track 2-9Optical Sensing Technologies
- Track 2-10Sensing Technologies for Health & Medicine
Electrochemical biosensors are usually supported protein enzymatic catalysis of a reaction that produces or consumes electrons (such enzymes are justly known as oxidoreduction enzymes). An enzyme biosensor is an analytical device that combines an enzyme with a transducer to produce a signal proportional to target analyte concentration. This signal can result from a change in proton concentration, release or uptake of gases, such as ammonia or oxygen, light emission, absorption or reflectance, heat emission, and so forth, brought about by the reaction catalyzed by the enzyme. Enzyme - based sensors are more specific than cell based sensors. They have faster responds due to shorter diffusion paths. They are expensive to produce due to the problem of isolating the enzyme. Optimal enzyme activity is essential for maintenance of physiological homeostasis. Both non-genetic and genetic disruptions can excessively activate or silence intrinsic enzyme activities, with pathological outcomes. The pharmacological agents are activators and inhibitors of enzymes. It is essential in the development of drugs as enzyme activators and inhibitors that enzyme activities be accurately measured under physiological and pathological conditions. The coupling of enzymes with electrochemical sensors permits the simple determination of metabolites, therapeutic drugs, antigens, and antibodies.
- Track 3-1Biomarkers for Diagnosis Diseases
- Track 3-2Glucose Oxidase Biosensor for Diabetes
- Track 3-3Implantable Glucose Biosensor
- Track 3-4Cholesterol Biosensor
- Track 3-5Superoxide Anion Radical Biosensor
- Track 3-6Thiol Biosensor
- Track 3-7Nitric oxide Biosensor
- Track 3-8Nitrite Biosensors
- Track 3-9Apoptosis Marker
Biosensors are devices globalizing a biological element and a physiochemical detector that are used to detect analytes. The biosensor products have a wide range of their applications ranging from numerous industries including food and beverages, agricultural, environmental, medical diagnostics, pharmaceutical industries, clinical through to environmental and agriculture and many more. Even though numerous biosensors have been developed for detection of proteins, peptides, enzymes, and numerous other biomolecules for diverse applications, their applications in tissue engineering have remained limited. Graphene based enzymatic and non-enzymatic electrodes can efficiently detect glucose, cytochrome-c, NADH, hemoglobin, HRP, and cholesterol, hydrogen peroxide, AA, UA, DA, respectively. Nano capsules are Nano scale shells made out of a nontoxic polymer. They are vesicular systems that are made up of a polymeric membrane which encapsulates an inner liquid core at the Nano scale level. Nano capsules have a myriad of uses, which include promising medical applications for drug delivery, food enhancement, nutraceuticals, and for the self-healing of materials.
- Track 4-1Biosensors in Biologics
- Track 4-2Biosensors in Drug development
- Track 4-3Blood glucose monitoring
- Track 4-4Electrochemical biosensors
- Track 4-5Food analysis & Quality Control
- Track 4-6Ozone Biosensors
- Track 4-7Microbial Biosensors
- Track 4-8Printed biosensors and microfabrication
A hypothetical computer logic circuit or storage device in which the physical or chemical properties of large biological molecules (as proteins) are used to process information. A Biochip is a combination of minute DNA spots hooked up to a hard surface. Scientists use DNA Biochips to check the expression levels of huge number of genes at the same time. Each DNA spot contains Pico moles of a précised DNA sequence known as a probe. These can be tiny section of a gene or a DNA particle that are used to cross breed a DNA or RNA. Immunosensors are built by means of the appropriate combination of the biomolecules with the transducers used together; they can be applied in specific analytical situations. Immunosensors commonly rely on the reuse of the same receptor surface for many measurements. Aptamers are oligonucleotide or peptide molecules that bind to a specific target molecule. Aptamers are usually created by selecting them from a large random sequence pool, but natural aptamers also exist in riboswitches.
- Track 5-1DNA chips
- Track 5-2Aptasensors
- Track 5-3Immunosensors
- Track 5-4Organism and whole cell-based biosensors
- Track 5-5Aptamers and their biological applications
- Track 5-6Aptamers and their biological applications
- Track 5-7Natural & synthetic receptors (including molecularly imprinted polymers)
- Track 5-8Microarray
Optical biosensors are those based on the detection of changes on absorption of UV/visible/Infrared light when chemical reactions occur or on the quantity of light emitted by some luminescent process. A piezoelectric sensor works with the properties of piezoelectric effect, which can vary in changing pressure, acceleration, temperature, strain, or force by converting them to an electrical charge. It can be applicable with medical, aerospace and nuclear instrumentation. Piezoelectric sensor acts as a pressure sensor in the touch pads of mobile phones. Gravimetric biosensor varies under piezoelectric biosensor and it uses thin piezoelectric quartz crystals as resonating crystals or as surface acoustic wave devices.
- Track 6-1Electronic Biosensors
- Track 6-2Gravimetric Biosensors
- Track 6-3Optimal Biosensors
- Track 6-4Piezoelectric Biosensors
- Track 6-5Pyroelectric Biosensors
- Track 6-6Optical Biosensors
Biomedical engineering (BME) is the application of engineering principles and design concepts to medicine and biology for healthcare purposes (e.g. diagnostic or therapeutic). This field seeks to close the gap between engineering and medicine: It combines the design and problem solving skills of engineering with medical and biological sciences to advance health care treatment, including diagnosis, monitoring, and therapy. To ensure that good quality assurance practices are used for the design of medical devices and that they are consistent with quality system requirements worldwide, the Food and Drug Administration revised the Current Good Manufacturing Practice (CGMP) requirements by incorporating them into the Quality System Regulation, 21 CFR Part 820. An important component of the revision is the addition of design controls.
- Track 7-1Biomarkers for cancer diagnostics
- Track 7-2Biomarkers for cancer diagnostics
- Track 7-3Biomaterials
- Track 7-4Biomedical Engineering
- Track 7-5Bioreceptors
- Track 7-6Medical device testing
- Track 7-7Virtual Instrumentation
- Track 7-8Virtual Electrochemical Analyzer
- Track 7-9Hypoxia markers
- Track 7-10Metalloproteins
- Track 7-11Lab on a chip
- Track 7-12Medical device design
Bioelectronics is a field of investigation in the conflux of biology and electronics. Biological properties can be measured and altered using electronics, magnetics, photonics, sensors, circuits, and algorithms. Bio molecular Electronics is a branch of Nano-science and technology dealing with the investigation and the technological exploitation of electron transport properties in special classes of biomolecules. Bioelectronics, specifically bio-molecular electronics, were described as 'the research and development of bio-inspired (i.e. self-assembly) inorganic and organic materials and of bio-inspired (i.e. massive parallelism) hardware architectures for the implementation of new information processing systems, sensors and actuators, and for molecular manufacturing down to the atomic scale. Biomedicine is a branch of medical sciences that deals with applying biological and natural science principles to clinical practices. It studies our ability to cope with the environmental changes.
- Track 8-1Bioelectrochemistry
- Track 8-2Biomechatronics
- Track 8-3Biomimetic Systems
- Track 8-4Bioelectrochemical reactor
- Track 8-5Bioelectrochemical reactor
- Track 8-6Electrochemical engineering
- Track 8-7Neurophysics
- Track 8-8Bioelectronic Devices in Medical Applications
- Track 8-9Biomolecular Electronics and Bioanalysis
- Track 8-10Microbial fuel cell
- Track 8-11Implantable Electronics
- Track 8-12Bioelectronics in Automation science
Nanotechnology is pretending an increasingly important role in the expansion of biosensors. Biosensors frequently comprise a biological recognition molecule immobilized onto the surface of a signal transducer to give a solid state analytical device. The use of nanomaterial’s has acknowledged the establishment of many new signal transduction technologies in biosensors through nanotechnology. Nanolithography is the branch of nanotechnology afflicted with the study and application of the nanofabrication of nanometer-scale structures, meaning Nano patterning with at least one lateral dimension between the size of an individual atom and generally 100 nm. Nanosensors are chemical or mechanical sensors that can be used to detect the presence of chemical species and nanoparticles, or monitor physical parameters such as temperature, on the Nano scale. Nano photonics is the new emerging paradigm where light interacts with Nano-scaled structures and brings forth the mysterious world to research.
- Track 9-1Nanobiosensors, nanomaterials & nanoanalytical systems
- Track 9-2Nanolithography
- Track 9-3Nanobioelectronics
- Track 9-4Nanopolymers
- Track 9-5Novel approaches of nanoparticles in sensing
- Track 9-6Nano materials and Nano analytical systems
- Track 9-7Nanophotonics/THz sensing
- Track 9-8Nanorobotics
- Track 9-9Nano bio computing
- Track 9-10Nanotheranostics
A bio transducer is the recognition-transduction component of a biosensor system. It consists of two intimately coupled parts; a bio-recognition layer and a physicochemical transducer, which acting together converts a biochemical signal to an electronic or optical signal. Electronic Biosensing offers significant advantages over optical, biochemical and biophysical analysis, in terms of high sensitivity and new sensing mechanisms, high spatial resolution for localized detection, facile integration with standard water-scale semiconductor processing and label-free, real-time detection in a nondestructive manner. Gravimetric biosensors use the basic principle of a response to a change in mass. Most gravimetric biosensors use thin piezoelectric quartz crystals, either as resonating crystals (QCM), or as bulk/surface acoustic wave (SAW) devices. Pyro electric biosensors generate an electric current as a result of a temperature change. This differential induces a polarization in the substance, producing a dipole moment in the direction of the temperature gradient. The result is a net voltage across the material.
- Track 10-1Signal Transduction Technologies (including magneto, piezo, optical and direct electrochemical techniques)
- Track 10-2Pressure Transducers
- Track 10-3Airborne Transducers
- Track 10-4Gravimetric/Piezoelectric biotransducers
- Track 10-5Voltammetric transducers
- Track 10-6FET-based electronic biotransducers
- Track 10-7Pyroelectric biotransducers
- Track 10-8Ultrasound Transducers
- Track 10-9Aimer Transducers
- Track 10-10Impedimetric Transducers
- Track 10-11Conductometric Transducers
Micro-/nanoelectromechanical systems (MEMS/NEMS) micro-/nanoelectromechanical system (MEMS/NEMS) need to be designed to perform expected functions in short durations, typically in the millisecond to picosecond range. Most mechanical properties are known to be scale dependent, therefore the properties of nanoscale structures need to be measured. For bioMEMS/bioNEMS, bioMEMS/bioNEMS adhesion between biological molecular layer molecular layers and the substrate, and friction and wear of biological layers, can be important. Bionics is the application of biological methods and systems found in nature to the study and design of engineering systems and modern technology Bionics means the replacement or enhancement of organs or other body parts by mechanical versions. Bionic implants differ from mere prostheses by mimicking the original function very closely, or even surpassing it. Bio robotics is the use of biological characteristics in living organisms as the knowledge base for developing new robot designs. The term can also refer to the use of biological specimens as functional robot components. Bio robotics intersects the fields of cybernetics, bionics, biology, physiology, and genetic engineering.
- Track 11-1Bionics
- Track 11-2Biorobotics
- Track 11-3Biosensor Controlled Gene Therapy
- Track 11-4Biosensors for Theranostics
- Track 11-5Biosensors for Theranostics
- Track 11-6Photothermal Blade and Nanodelivery System
- Track 11-7Bio-MEMS for diagnostics
The field of optical biosensors has been a growing research area over the last three decades. A wide range of books and review articles has been published by experts in the field who have highlighted the advantages of optical sensing over other transduction methods. Fluorescence is by far the method most often applied and comes in a variety of schemes. Nowadays, one of the most common approaches in the field of optical biosensors is to combine the high sensitivity of fluorescence detection in combination with the high selectivity provided by ligand-binding proteins. In this chapter we deal with reviewing our recent results on the implementation of fluorescence-based sensors for monitoring environmentally hazardous gas molecules. Medical Image Analysis provides a forum for the dissemination of new research results in the field of medical and biological image analysis, with special emphasis on efforts related to the applications of high-level computer vision, virtual reality and robotics to biomedical imaging problems
- Track 12-1Novel biosensors for live cell imaging
- Track 12-2Bio Sensors in Resonance Imaging
- Track 12-33D imaging interaction
- Track 12-4Biomedical Image Analysis
- Track 12-5Live cell Fluorescent Biosensors
- Track 12-6Theranostics & Implantable sensors
Photonic Sensing focuses on experimental contributions related to novel principles, and structures or materials for photonic sensors. Optical fibers can be used as sensors to measure strain, temperature, pressure and other quantities by modifying a fiber so that the quantity to be measured modulates the intensity, phase, polarization and wavelength or transit time of light in the fiber. Sensors that vary the intensity of light are the simplest, since only a simple source and detector are required. A particularly useful feature of intrinsic optical fiber sensors is that they can, if required, provide distributed sensing over very large distances. Photonic integrated circuits (PICs) are optically active integrated semiconductor photonic devices which consist of at least two different functional blocks, (gain region and a grating based mirror in a laser...). These devices are responsible for commercial successes of optical communications and the ability to increase the available bandwidth without significant cost increases to the end user, through improved performance and cost reduction that they provide. The most widely deployed PICs are based on Indium phosphide material system. Silicon photonics is an active area of research.
- Track 13-1Photonic Diagnostics & Biosensors
- Track 13-2Security and Process Technology
- Track 13-3Biophotonics
- Track 13-4Bio and Environmental Analytics
- Track 13-5Quantum and High Powered lasers
- Track 13-6Photonic Diagnostics & Biosensors
The majority of reported biosensor research has been directed toward development of devices for clinical markets; however, driven by a need for better methods for environmental surveillance, research into this technology is also expanding to encompass environmental applications. Biosensors are biophysical devices which can detect the presence of specific substances e.g. sugars, proteins, hormones, pollutants and a variety of toxins in the environment. They are also capable of measuring the quantities of these specific substances in the environment.
- Track 14-1Environmental Monitoring Biosensors
- Track 14-2Environmental Monitoring Biosensors
- Track 14-3Plant Monitoring Biosensors
- Track 14-4Marine Monitoring Biosensors
- Track 14-5Heavy metal Ion Monitoring Biosensors
Market by Application: The biosensors market is mainly categorized into applications, such as the point-of-care, home diagnostics, research labs, biodefense, environmental monitoring, and food industries.
- Track 15-1Commercial Biosensors, manufacturing and markets
- Track 15-2Biosensors Market Analysis
- Track 15-3Economic & Business Influence