Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.110, No.20, 10165-10169, 2006
Bacteria counting with impedance spectroscopy in a micro probe station
A method to quantify the density of viable biological cells in suspensions is presented. The method is implemented by low- frequency impedance spectroscopy and based on the finding that immobilized ions are released to move freely in the surrounding suspension when viable Escherichia coli cells are killed by a heat shock. The presented results show that an amount of ions corresponding to similar to 2 x 10(8) unit charges are released per viable bacterium killed. A micro probe station with coplanar Ti electrodes was electrically characterized and used as a measuring unit for the impedance spectroscopy recordings. This unit is compatible with common microfabrication techniques and should enable the presented method to be employed using a flow- cell device for viable bacteria counting in miniaturized on- line monitoring systems.