Literature DB >> 23620303

Chip-scale Mid-Infrared chemical sensors using air-clad pedestal silicon waveguides.

Pao Tai Lin1, Vivek Singh, Juejun Hu, Kathleen Richardson, J David Musgraves, Igor Luzinov, Joel Hensley, Lionel C Kimerling, Anu Agarwal.   

Abstract

Towards a future lab-on-a-chip spectrometer, we demonstrate a compact chip-scale air-clad silicon pedestal waveguide as a Mid-Infrared (Mid-IR) sensor capable of in situ monitoring of organic solvents. The sensor is a planar crystalline silicon waveguide, which is highly transparent, between λ = 1.3 and 6.5 μm, so that its operational spectral range covers most characteristic chemical absorption bands due to bonds such as C-H, N-H, O-H, C-C, N-O, C=O, and C≡N, as opposed to conventional UV, Vis, Near-IR sensors, which use weaker overtones of these fundamental bands. To extend light transmission beyond λ = 3.7 μm, a spectral region where a typical silicon dioxide under-clad is absorbing, we fabricate a unique air-clad silicon pedestal waveguide. The sensing mechanism of our Mid-IR waveguide sensor is based on evanescent wave absorption by functional groups of the surrounding chemical molecules, which selectively absorb specific wavelengths in the mid-IR, depending on the nature of their chemical bonds. From a measurement of the waveguide mode intensities, we demonstrate in situ identification of chemical compositions and concentrations of organic solvents. For instance, we show that when testing at λ = 3.55 μm, the Mid-IR sensor can distinguish hexane from the rest of the tested analytes (methanol, toluene, carbon tetrachloride, ethanol and acetone), since hexane has a strong absorption from the aliphatic C-H stretch at λ = 3.55 μm. Analogously, applying the same technique at λ = 3.3 μm, the Mid-IR sensor is able to determine the concentration of toluene dissolved in carbon tetrachloride, because toluene has a strong absorption at λ = 3.3 μm from the aromatic C-H stretch. With our demonstration of an air-clad silicon pedestal waveguide sensor, we move closer towards the ultimate goal of an ultra-compact portable spectrometer-on-a-chip.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23620303     DOI: 10.1039/c3lc50177a

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lab Chip        ISSN: 1473-0189            Impact factor:   6.799


  4 in total

1.  Pedestal High-Contrast Gratings for Biosensing.

Authors:  Leonid Yu Beliaev; Peter Groth Stounbjerg; Giovanni Finco; Ada-Ioana Bunea; Radu Malureanu; Lars René Lindvold; Osamu Takayama; Peter E Andersen; Andrei V Lavrinenko
Journal:  Nanomaterials (Basel)       Date:  2022-05-20       Impact factor: 5.719

2.  Glucose sensing by waveguide-based absorption spectroscopy on a silicon chip.

Authors:  E Ryckeboer; R Bockstaele; M Vanslembrouck; R Baets
Journal:  Biomed Opt Express       Date:  2014-04-24       Impact factor: 3.732

Review 3.  Mid-infrared materials and devices on a Si platform for optical sensing.

Authors:  Vivek Singh; Pao Tai Lin; Neil Patel; Hongtao Lin; Lan Li; Yi Zou; Fei Deng; Chaoying Ni; Juejun Hu; James Giammarco; Anna Paola Soliani; Bogdan Zdyrko; Igor Luzinov; Spencer Novak; Jackie Novak; Peter Wachtel; Sylvain Danto; J David Musgraves; Kathleen Richardson; Lionel C Kimerling; Anuradha M Agarwal
Journal:  Sci Technol Adv Mater       Date:  2014-01-30       Impact factor: 8.090

4.  Detection of volatile organic compounds using mid-infrared silicon nitride waveguide sensors.

Authors:  Junchao Zhou; Diana Al Husseini; Junyan Li; Zhihai Lin; Svetlana Sukhishvili; Gerard L Coté; Ricardo Gutierrez-Osuna; Pao Tai Lin
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-04-02       Impact factor: 4.996

  4 in total

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