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Ben Sima edited this page May 13, 2015 · 11 revisions

Nebula Bio Protochip

The Protochip is a portable, modular, open-source, blood-analysis system. Currently it is hosted on the CheapStat, which is a potentiostat attached to a custom microcontroller and circuit board, but there are plans to move to Arduino or other more modular hosts. CheapStats can be purchased at IORodeo.

To watch the development of the Protochip in real-time, stay tuned to this repo and our open Trello board.

Overview

The purpose of the Protochip is to supply biohackers and other researchers with a flexible, cheap, and---most imporantly---reliable tool for studying blood analytes. The Protochip is a research tool, and it only reports raw data. The system is composed of 4 parts:

  1. The biochip consists of two pieces of plastic fused together with a small channel in the middle about 50 µm wide. Inside the channel we embed an antibody specific to whatever we want to test for. This is the basis for a microfluidic ELISA test. Biochips can be configured for any ELISA test, but (as of now) each biochip can only perform one test at a time.
  2. The potentiostat is an electrical circuit embedded in a silicon wafer which is basically just three electrodes. It connects to the biochip and measures the change in current across the microfluidic channel. Once the blood is introduced to the biochip's microchannel, the antibody will react with the analyte and cause a change in electrical current. This technique (rather standard in electrochemistry) is known as voltammetry. The relative change in current can tell us not only if a specific analyte is present, but also the concentration of said analyte.
  3. The microcontroller (mcu) reads the signal from the potentiostat then converts and transmits the data to a computer via USB.
  4. The driver is a software daemon that reads the data from the mcu and reports it to the user in a variety of formats. The daemon is fully configurable and scriptable by the user, or can be controlled by a GUI.

Currently the potentiostat and mcu are combined in the CheapStat. Each test requires less than a drop of blood produced by a standard finger prick. The entire system is designed to be modular, so it is not hard to imagine daisy-chaining Protochips together, perhaps in a cluster of Raspberry Pis, in order to emulate Theranos' infrastructure.

Current Status

The prototype has been fully built and is in the full function test stage of our testing plan. Fabrication of hardware has been worked out. Software and hardware have been assembled and tested together and independently. Biological molecules in different concentrations have been detected and analyzed. The final stage which is blood testing is scheduled to begin this week (05/10).

Fabrication

The Protochip is currently manufactured in-house. We've built some custom manufacturing tools to make the biochips. Instructions on how to make your own manufacturing tools are forthcoming. For now, to order a Protochip, email one of the members of this repo.

Our hotpress is outfitted with a pressure guage and a digital thermometer which allow for consistent chips to be made in 1 minute. The current press is designed for one chip at a time but can easily be exchanged into a larger rig to make multiple chips. The press is simple, but throroughly tested and provides consistent results.

Financing

We recently started a rolling crowdfunding project organized on Trello. Details are on that Trello board, but basically each card under "Needs Funding" is available for sponsorship. Just add a comment on the Trello card or contact one of the project members if you want to sponsor or fund a card.

All expenses are tracked in finances.dat in the repo root and calculated with ledger

Monetization

It is our intention to make the Protochip into a self-funding business. We follow the trail of other open-source hardware companies such as Raspberry Pi and Arduino.

Alpha testing of the protochip was financed out-of-pocket (see finances.dat in the root of the repo). For the beta testers, each chip costs about $10. As we expand, cost-per-chip will go down, until we arrive at an expected cost of $0.70 per chip.

Marketing

We implement a constraint-based marketing strategy. Each marketing-related project or operation must follow the contraints below:

  • No money is allowed to be spent on traditional advertising channels. This includes but is not limited to TV, billboards, magazine ads, brochures, t-shirts and other "swag". However stickers are allowed. We like stickers.
  • All press releases and blog posts must be written first by an engineer, second by a designer, and may be proofread by a liberal arts major. Marketing and business people are not allowed to write press releases or blog posts.
  • No anonymous stock photos or models are allowed in the marketing materials---photos must be taken by project members or customers.
  • (To be continued...)

2015 Deliverables Timeline

Product Development

Date Description
05/18 Prove cortisol detection
06/01 Customer Online Demos/MVP Analysis
06/15 Fully Implement cortisol Detection in Protochip
06/19 MVP Complete using demo data
07/13 Beta test begins
07/27 Hardware design iteration based on feedback from beta
08/10 Hardware design iteration complete
08/24 Software UI design iteration

Business Developent

Date Description
06/01 Pricing research completed
06/15 Marketing website and video completed
06/29 White paper submitted to PLOS One
07/13 Community site for beta test completed
07/27 Feedback from beta test gathered
07/24 Schedule showing for AHS 2016 and begin next planning phase

Contact

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