The construction and performance evaluation of a novel Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD) sensor is described. The sensor measures, using an oxygen electrode, a decrease of dissolved oxygen of a given sample resulting from photocatalytic oxidation of the organic compounds therein. As the photocatalyst, titanium dioxide (TiO2) fine particles adsorbed on a translucent poly(tetrafluoroethylene) (PTFE) membrane was used. The oxygen electrode with the membrane attached on its tip was used as the sensor probe. The operation characteristics of the sensor are demonstrated using an artificial wastewater and real water samples from lakes in Japan. This method is considered to be reliable, in that the observed parameter is close to the theoretical definition of chemical oxygen demand (COD), the amount of oxygen consumed for oxidation of organic compounds.
A fiber optic microsphere-based oligonucleotide array is described that employs the sequence of the oligonucleotide probe attached to each microsphere as positional identifiers. Each microsphere serves as an immobilized array feature, functionalized with a unique single-stranded oligonucleotide sequence and randomly distributed into an array of microwells. To determine the sequences attached to individual microspheres, a series of fluorescently labeled combinatorial-pooled oligonucleotide target solutions was designed. Each combinatorial decoding solution is intended to identify the nucleotide at a particular position on every microsphere in the array. The combinatorial target solutions were synthesized by linking the four possible nucleotides at each position to four different fluorescent reporter dyes. As such, when the solutions were hybridized to the array, one of four possible fluorescent responses was generated for each position on a microsphere probe sequence. Adjusting the stringency of hybridization enabled single-base mismatch discrimination, and the signal with the highest intensity corresponded to the perfect nucleotide match. By consecutively exposing the array to a series of combinatorial decoding pool solutions, it was possible to simultaneously determine the sequence of every randomly positioned oligonucleotide-functionalized microsphere in the array. Once mapped, the microsphere array can be used for any typical genomic microarray experiment.
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