Nanotech breath sensor can tell if someone has diabetes or not

Washington, May 21 (ANI): A nanotechnology-based sensor could soon tell whether someone has Type I diabetes – just by analysing their breath.

The sensor, which has been successfully tested by researchers in Switzerland, could also be used by emergency room doctors to determine whether a patient has developed diabetic ketoacidosis, a potentially serious complication that happens when diabetics do not take enough insulin.

Even diabetics could use the technology someday in their own homes, to determine whether they need more insulin.

Professor Sotiris E. Pratsinis and colleagues at ETH Zurich in Switzerland explain that everyone has a little bit of acetone in their breath.

But people with Type I diabetes release unusually high levels of the chemical when they exhale.

If they have diabetic ketoacidosis, a dangerous buildup of acetone in the blood, they exhale even-larger amounts of acetone.

The researchers built an extremely sensitive acetone detector by directly depositing from a flame plume a thin film of semiconducting, mixed ceramic nanoparticles between a set of gold electrodes.

The device acts like an electrical resistor. When it gets hit with a puff of acetone-filled air, its resistance drops, allowing more electricity to pass between the electrodes.

If a diabetic were to breathe on the sensor, its resistance would suddenly drop.

When a healthy person exhales onto the nanoparticles, their resistance will not change very much.

The scientists found this new sensor can detect acetone in extremely moist air, an attribute that is critical for any breath test.

It is sensitive enough to detect acetone at 20 parts per billion, a concentration that is 90 times lower than the level at which it can be found in the breath of diabetic patients.

The study has been published in ACS” Analytical Chemistry, a semi-monthly journal. (ANI)

Airgas Hosts Session at PITTCON 2010 on Benefits of Automated FTIR and Automated LabPaks for Testing Calibration Gas Mixtures

RADNOR, Pa.–(Business Wire)–
Airgas, Inc. (NYSE:ARG) will host a session on the benefits of automated FTIR
(Fourier Transform Infrared) spectroscopy and process analysis systems for
testing calibration gases at the Pittsburgh Conference on Analytical Chemistry
and Applied Spectroscopy (PITTCON) in Orlando today at 2:40 p.m. Airgas
currently employs 11 automated FTIR systems at select national and regional
specialty gas laboratories located throughout the U.S. The presentation, given
by Douglas King, manager of analytical processes at Airgas Specialty Gases, will
explore system components, unique concepts, developmental challenges and
benefits compared to previous laboratory processes.

“Fully automated FTIR analysis systems provide unattended, extremely high-speed
analysis of calibration gas mixtures,” King said. “Our presentation is designed
to highlight the benefits and importance of this process which significantly
improves the measurement of uncertainties and helps to achieve higher levels of
analytical consistency.”

“We are pleased to host this session and exhibit at PITTCON to give our
customers and prospective customers the opportunity to meet some of the most
capable and experienced people in the industry,” said Jim Muller, senior vice
president for specialty gases and life sciences at Airgas. “As the leader in
specialty gases, Airgas has specialists to help provide our customers with the
gases and equipment that give them consistent performance in the analytical and
life science laboratory.”

Additional information about this session and other Airgas Specialty Gases`
products and services, will be available at the Airgas booth (number 3521),
March 1 – 4. Registered PITTCON attendees who visit the Airgas exhibit will be
entered to win a Kindle, Amazon`s original wireless reading device.

About Airgas, Inc.

Based in Radnor, Pennsylvania, Airgas, Inc. (NYSE: ARG), through its
subsidiaries, is the largest U.S. distributor of industrial, medical, and
specialty gases, and hardgoods, such as welding equipment and supplies. Airgas
is also one of the largest U.S. distributors of safety products, the largest
U.S. producer of nitrous oxide and dry ice, the largest liquid carbon dioxide
producer in the Southeast, the fifth largest producer of atmospheric merchant
gases in North America, and a leading distributor of process chemicals,
refrigerants, and ammonia products. More than 14,000 employees work in over
1,100 locations, including branches, retail stores, gas fill plants, specialty
gas labs, production facilities, and distribution centers. Airgas also
distributes its products and services through eBusiness, catalog, and telesales
channels. Its national scale and strong local presence offer a competitive edge
to its diversified customer base. For more information, please visit
www.airgas.com.

Airgas, Inc.
Media Contact:
Jay Worley, 610-902-6206
jay.worley@airgas.com
or
Investor Contact:
Barry Strzelec, 610-902-6256
barry.strzelec@airgas.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Airgas Unveils New Line of Remote Gas Monitoring Solutions at PITTCON 2010

RADNOR, Pa.–(Business Wire)–
Airgas, Inc. (NYSE: ARG), the largest U.S. distributor of specialty gases and
equipment, unveiled its new line of remote gas monitoring systems for laboratory
gases at the Pittsburgh Conference on Analytical Chemistry and Applied
Spectroscopy (PITTCON) in Orlando. The product offering features several models
at different price points, including a wired, low-cost system and two wireless
solutions to efficiently monitor gas pressure or liquid levels in cylinders.

“The Airgas systems can monitor nearly any gas function within a facility and
are priced to fit any budget,” said Frank Kandl, manager of Airgas` national
technical equipment center. “You can remotely and automatically monitor gas
pressure in cylinders, liquid levels of liquefied gases, temperature, whether
contacts such as doors or lids are opened/closed and laboratories can realize a
significant cost savings in labor, reassigning staff to other important duties.”

The basic remote monitoring system uses a wired connection and monitors gas
pressure from up to 16 sources. It has indicating pressure switches that can be
preset to send e-mail alerts when pressure and gas cylinder volume reach preset
levels. Systems can be added to standard alarm panels that are rated NEMA 4,
Class I, Division II, Group B, making them suitable for all inert and flammable
gases, with the exception of acetylene. Its low cost is particularly attractive
to laboratories functioning on smaller budgets.

The second model in Airgas` new line is completely wireless and can monitor data
from any device with a gauge face or that produces a 4 to 20 ma or a 0 to 5 vdc
signal. The system reads the gauge face or converts the signal and transmits the
information, using wireless technology, to either a computer network or cellular
telephone hub, which in turn calls or sends a text message alert.

The third model in Airgas` remote gas monitoring systems is part of the
company`s Smart Logic Manifolds, a line of fully automatic PLC-based change over
manifolds that can be connected to a laboratory computer network. The system can
be configured for any gas source, including high-pressure cylinders, liquid
cylinders or a combination of the two. The system monitors a variety of data and
can provide alerts to notify staff when a cylinder change out has occurred and
that an empty cylinder needs to be replaced. It can also alert staff when
detecting unusually high volumes of gas usage, which could indicate a leak.

The option to manifold systems also monitors the frequency of changeover from
the active gas supply to the reserve gas supply, alerting the user that they
could be overdrawing liquid cylinders – a unique feature not available in other
systems on the market.

For more information about Airgas` line of remote gas monitoring systems, please
visit the Airgas booth (number 3521) or call 800-939-5711, ext. 110. Registered
PITTCON attendees who visit the Airgas exhibit will be entered to win a Kindle,
Amazon`s original wireless reading device.

About Airgas, Inc.

Based in Radnor, Pennsylvania, Airgas, Inc. (NYSE: ARG), through its
subsidiaries, is the largest U.S. distributor of industrial, medical, and
specialty gases, and hardgoods, such as welding equipment and supplies. Airgas
is also one of the largest U.S. distributors of safety products, the largest
U.S. producer of nitrous oxide and dry ice, the largest liquid carbon dioxide
producer in the Southeast, the fifth largest producer of atmospheric merchant
gases in North America, and a leading distributor of process chemicals,
refrigerants, and ammonia products. More than 14,000 employees work in over
1,100 locations, including branches, retail stores, gas fill plants, specialty
gas labs, production facilities, and distribution centers. Airgas also
distributes its products and services through eBusiness, catalog, and telesales
channels. Its national scale and strong local presence offer a competitive edge
to its diversified customer base. For more information, please visit
www.airgas.com.

Airgas, Inc.
Media Contact:
Jay Worley, 610-902-6206
jay.worley@airgas.com
or
Investor Contact:
Barry Strzelec, 610-902-6256
barry.strzelec@airgas.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Airgas Introduces New Analytical Regulators at PITTCON 2010

Responds to Gas Chromatographers` Need for Low-Cost, High-Purity, Lightweight
Regulators
RADNOR, Pa.–(Business Wire)–
Airgas, Inc. (NYSE: ARG), the largest U.S. distributor of specialty gases and
equipment, today introduced its new line of analytical specialty gas regulators
designed especially for gas chromatography at the 61st Pittsburgh Conference on
Analytical Chemistry and Applied Spectroscopy (PITTCON) in Orlando. The
regulators were developed in response to chromatographers` requests for a
low-cost and a more lightweight option.

Chromatographers are tasked with working within the parameters of increasingly
tight budgets. One option is to use low-cost regulators that are not designed
for chromatography applications – a side effect of which is the introduction of
impurities into the gas stream, producing inconsistent results. “We are always
listening to our customers,” said Jim Muller, senior vice president for
specialty gases and life sciences at Airgas. “Chromatographers will appreciate
this new line of analytical regulators because now they can use these similarly
priced, high-purity regulators and get optimum and accurate results.”

Airgas` patented regulators are made from solid bar stock with a needle valve
built in the regulator body to reduce internal volume and have stainless steel
diaphragms to provide the consistent, high-purity results required in gas
chromatography applications. “Typical low-cost regulators use a forged body and,
as a result, have a large internal volume which can trap impurities and create
inconsistencies in analytical results,” explained Frank Kandl, manager of
Airgas` national technical equipment center. “They also tend to use neoprene
diaphragms which can absorb and off-gas contaminants into the gas stream.”

Kandl attributes a unique bonnet design that incorporates a special resin, to
the regulator`s significantly reduced weight. Airgas regulators are more than 10
percent lighter than similarly priced models, making them easier to handle when
connecting to a cylinder. The regulators also have an available check-valve
cylinder connection to prevent contaminants from entering the gas stream during
cylinder change out.

For more information about Airgas` analytical regulators for gas chromatography,
please visit the Airgas booth (number 3521), March 1 – 4, or by calling
800-939-5711, ext. 110. Registered PITTCON attendees who visit the Airgas
exhibit will be entered to win a Kindle, Amazon`s original wireless reading
device.

About Airgas, Inc.

Based in Radnor, Pennsylvania, Airgas, Inc. (NYSE: ARG), through its
subsidiaries, is the largest U.S. distributor of industrial, medical, and
specialty gases, and hardgoods, such as welding equipment and supplies. Airgas
is also one of the largest U.S. distributors of safety products, the largest
U.S. producer of nitrous oxide and dry ice, the largest liquid carbon dioxide
producer in the Southeast, the fifth largest producer of atmospheric merchant
gases in North America, and a leading distributor of process chemicals,
refrigerants, and ammonia products. More than 14,000 employees work in over
1,100 locations, including branches, retail stores, gas fill plants, specialty
gas labs, production facilities, and distribution centers. Airgas also
distributes its products and services through eBusiness, catalog, and telesales
channels. Its national scale and strong local presence offer a competitive edge
to its diversified customer base. For more information, please visit
www.airgas.com.

Airgas, Inc.
Media Contact:
Jay Worley (610) 902-6206
jay.worley@airgas.com
or
Investor Contact:
Barry Strzelec (610) 902-6256
barry.strzelec@airgas.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Novel biosensor can detect typhoid bacteria instantly

Washington, Sept 9 (ANI): Scientists from Rovira i Virgili University (URV) in Tarragona have come up with a novel biosensor that can instantly detect Salmonella typhi, the bacteria that causes typhoid fever.

The technique uses carbon nanotubes and synthetic DNA fragments that activate an electric signal when they link up with the pathogen.

“We have developed a new biosensor that can detect extremely low concentrations of bacteria immediately, easily and reliably”, F. Xavier Rius, lead author of the study and a professor in the Chemometrics, Qualimetrics and Nanosensors research group in the Analytical Chemistry and Organic Chemistry Department of the URV, told SINC.

The new biosensor functions using a method, which involves carbon nanotubes with inbuilt aptamers providing electrochemical readings.

According to the researchers, the aptamers are small fragments of artificial DNA or RNA designed to attach themselves specifically to a particular molecule, cell or micro organism, in this case Salmonella.

If the bacteria are not present, the aptamers remain on the walls of the carbon nanotubes.

However, if they detect bacteria, they become activated and stick to it, and the carbon nanotubes generate an electric signal that is picked up by a simple potentiometer connected to the biosensor.

“The presence of the bacteria sparks a change in the interaction between the aptamers and the nanotubes, which takes place in a few seconds and creates an increase in the voltage of the electrode”, said Ruis, who led the research along with researcher Jordi Riu.

“This technique means small quantities of micro organisms can be detected simply and practically in real time, just the same as measuring the pH of water”, Ruis added.

The study appears in the scientific journal Angewandte Chemie International Edition. (ANI)

How ants identify dead nestmates

Washington, May 6 (ANI): A dead ant is usually identified by its nestmates and removed from the colony, thus limiting the risk of colony infection by pathogens from the corpse. But how the news of a resident’s death is communicated among the nestmates has not been clearly known to date.

For a long time, entomologists have thought that dead ants release chemicals created by decomposition (such as fatty acids) that signal their death to the colony’s living ants.

But, now, UC Riverside entomologists working on Argentine ants provide evidence for a different mechanism for how necrophoresis – the removal of dead nestmates from colonies – works.

They have said that all ants, both living and dead, have the “death chemicals” continually, but living ants have them along with other chemicals associated with life – the “life chemicals.”

When an ant dies, its life chemicals dissipate or are degraded, and only the death chemicals remain.

“It’s because the dead ant no longer smells like a living ant that it gets carried to the graveyard, not because its body releases new, unique chemicals after death,” said Dong-Hwan Choe, the lead author of the research paper.

“There is no mistaking that it is the dissipation of chemical signals associated with life rather than the increase of a decomposition product ‘death cue’ that triggers necrophoric behaviour by Argentine ants,” he said.

The researchers used analytical chemistry techniques to identify the “signals of life” in the Argentine ant: the chemicals dolichodial and iridomyrmecin.

“These chemicals, or compounds similar to them, are found in numerous ant species that display necrophoresis. Therefore, these ant species also are likely to have necrophoric behavior triggered by the decrease or absence of chemical signs of life, rather than by cues associated with death. We plan to research this next,” said Choe.

He added that dolichodal, iridomyrmecin, or similar compounds are found also in other insects, such as thrips, stick insects, aphids and rove beetles.

“Understanding the exact mechanism of ant necrophoresis will help researchers develop a more environmentally friendly pest management strategy by which we can achieve results with smaller amounts of insecticide,” Choe said.

The study has been published online in the early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)