Omni-Matrix is not a typical cybersecurity product, but a trace DNA collection platform for forensic evidence recovery and identity identification. Its K105 system uses a water-insoluble polymer matrix: it is sprayed onto smooth, non-porous evidence surfaces to form a thin film, physically encapsulating surface cells and free DNA. The film is then mechanically scraped off and lysed to release material into the downstream extraction workflow. The core claim is to reduce evidence loss caused by irreversible adsorption into the fiber matrix of traditional cotton or flocked swabs.
In terms of βprotection type,β this is closer to an evidence preservation and biological forensic collection consumable than an endpoint, network, or cloud security product. Deployment is via a disposable 1 mL spray bottle in the field: spray from around 6 inches away, wait about 20 minutes for the film to dry, then scrape it into a collection tube with a sterile plastic blade. Compatibility is a key selling point: the materials state that it can integrate with standard magnetic-bead extraction systems, including Omni-Mag, and is compatible with STR, SNP, WGS, capillary electrophoresis, and some high-throughput microfluidic workflows. There is no information on management or alerting, network-side integration, APIs, SIEM/SOAR, or other cybersecurity capabilities.
The public materials cite two independent validations: NFSTC 2016 and John Jay/Ramirez 2019. Reported results include 97.7% allele recovery from blood-on-glass samples, 98.8% recovery from mixed fingerprints, and a 15x higher median DNA yield from touch DNA compared with FLOQSwab. These figures are useful references for forensic laboratories. However, compliance certifications, jurisdictions where it has been accepted in court, quality system certifications, commercial pricing, payment methods, and procurement channels are not disclosed. References such as β70β75% Gross Margin at Scaleβ and β$8M Series Aβ are investment-related information and should not be interpreted as customer pricing.
The main strengths are a clear technical mechanism, a focus on addressing recovery loss from traditional swabs through a βfully releasable collection matrix,β and validation by independent organizations. The disposable spray format also supports more standardized field collection. Limitations include its apparent focus on smooth, non-porous surfaces, with no data provided for complex, porous, or wet environments. The field process also requires about 20 minutes of waiting time, which may not suit all rapid sampling tasks. In addition, information on support, certifications, mass-production delivery, and regional distribution is limited.
Omni-Matrix is better suited to forensic laboratories, criminal investigation agencies, disaster victim identification teams, border identity verification, and low-template DNA research. It is not a substitute for cybersecurity procurement. Access, payment, and local compliance status in China are unknown. If used for domestic forensic identification in China, buyers would also need to consider local certification, admissibility in court, import approval for consumables, and in-lab validation. Alternatives include traditional cotton or flocked swabs, as well as existing magnetic-bead extraction, STR, SNP, and WGS workflows.
β This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on omni-matrix.com official site.
omni-matrix.com is an United States Cybersecurity provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach omni-matrix.com directly.