Asymmetric nanofluidic grating detector for differential refractive index measurement and biosensing

被引:18
作者
Purr, F. [1 ,2 ]
Bassu, M. [2 ]
Lowe, R. D. [2 ]
Thuermann, B. [1 ]
Dietzel, A. [1 ]
Burg, T. P. [2 ]
机构
[1] TU Braunschweig, Inst Microtechnol, D-38124 Braunschweig, Germany
[2] Max Planck Inst Biophys Chem, D-37077 Gottingen, Germany
关键词
DIMENSIONAL PHOTONIC CRYSTALS; FABRY-PEROT-INTERFEROMETER; DIFFRACTION GRATINGS; MICROFLUIDIC DEVICES; SENSOR; REFRACTOMETER; CHIP;
D O I
10.1039/c7lc00929a
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Measuring small changes in refractive index can provide both sensitive and contactless information on molecule concentration or process conditions for a wide range of applications. However, refractive index measurements are easily perturbed by non-specific background signals, such as temperature changes or non-specific binding. Here, we present an optofluidic device for measuring refractive index with direct background subtraction within a single measurement. The device is comprised of two interdigitated arrays of nanofluidic channels designed to form an optical grating. Optical path differences between the two sets of channels can be measured directly via an intensity ratio within the diffraction pattern that forms when the grating is illuminated by a collimated laser beam. Our results show that no calibration or biasing is required if the unit cell of the grating is designed with an appropriate built-in asymmetry. In proof-of-concept experiments we attained a noise level equivalent to similar to 10(-5) refractive index units (30 Hz sampling rate, 4 min measurement interval). Furthermore, we show that the accumulation of biomolecules on the surface of the nanochannels can be measured in real-time. Because of its simplicity and robustness, we expect that this inherently differential measurement concept will find many applications in ultra-low volume analytical systems, biosensors, and portable devices.
引用
收藏
页码:4265 / 4272
页数:8
相关论文
共 54 条
[1]   Thinned fibre Bragg grating as a fuel adulteration sensor: simulation and experimental study [J].
Agarwal, S. ;
Prajapati, Y. K. ;
Mishra, V. .
OPTO-ELECTRONICS REVIEW, 2015, 23 (04) :231-238
[2]  
Bashkatov A. N., 2003, P SPIE 5068 SAR FALL, V393, P393
[3]  
BV Metrohm Autolab, 2009, AUT ESPRIT ACQ 4 4 U
[4]   A packaged optical slot-waveguide ring resonator sensor array for multiplex label-free assays in labs-on-chips [J].
Carlborg, C. F. ;
Gylfason, K. B. ;
Kazmierczak, A. ;
Dortu, F. ;
Banuls Polo, M. J. ;
Maquieira Catala, A. ;
Kresbach, G. M. ;
Sohlstrom, H. ;
Moh, T. ;
Vivien, L. ;
Popplewell, J. ;
Ronan, G. ;
Barrios, C. A. ;
Stemme, G. ;
van der Wijngaart, W. .
LAB ON A CHIP, 2010, 10 (03) :281-290
[5]   Simple microfluidic chip structure for an alignment-free Young interferometry-based refractometer [J].
Chaitavon, Kosom ;
Sumriddetchkajorn, Sarun ;
Nukeaw, Jiti .
RSC ADVANCES, 2013, 3 (45) :23470-23473
[6]   Highly sensitive refractive index measurement with a sandwiched single-flow-channel microfluidic chip [J].
Chaitavon, Kosom ;
Sumriddetchkajorn, Sarun ;
Nukeaw, Jiti .
RSC ADVANCES, 2013, 3 (19) :6981-6984
[7]   In situ assembled diffraction grating for biomolecular detection [J].
Chang, Chun-Li ;
Acharya, Ghanashyam ;
Savran, Cagri A. .
APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 2007, 90 (23)
[8]   Reflective Diffraction Gratings From Hydrogels as Biochemical Sensors [J].
Chang, Chun-Li ;
Ding, Zhenwen ;
Patchigolla, Venkata N. L. R. ;
Ziaie, Babak ;
Savran, Cagri A. .
IEEE SENSORS JOURNAL, 2012, 12 (07) :2374-2379
[9]   Compact resonant integrated microfluidic refractometer [J].
Domachuk, P ;
Littler, ICM ;
Cronin-Golomb, M ;
Eggleton, BJ .
APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 2006, 88 (09)
[10]   Refractive index sensor based on plastic optical fiber with tapered structure [J].
Feng De-Jun ;
Liu Guan-Xiu ;
Liu Xi-Lu ;
Jiang Ming-Shun ;
Sui Qing-Mei .
APPLIED OPTICS, 2014, 53 (10) :2007-2011