| Literature DB >> 24328355 |
Pao Tai Lin1, Sen Wai Kwok, Hao-Yu Greg Lin, Vivek Singh, Lionel C Kimerling, George M Whitesides, Anu Agarwal.
Abstract
A mid-infrared (mid-IR) spectrometer for label-free on-chip chemical sensing was developed using an engineered nanofluidic channel consisting of a Si-liquid-Si slot-structure. Utilizing the large refractive index contrast (Δn ∼ 2) between the liquid core of the waveguide and the Si cladding, a broadband mid-IR lightwave can be efficiently guided and confined within a nanofluidic capillary (≤100 nm wide). The optical-field enhancement, together with the direct interaction between the probe light and the analyte, increased the sensitivity for chemical detection by 50 times when compared to evanescent-wave sensing. This spectrometer distinguished several common organic liquids (e.g., n-bromohexane, toluene, isopropanol) accurately and could determine the ratio of chemical species (e.g., acetonitrile and ethanol) at low concentration (<5 μL/mL) in a mixture through spectral scanning over their characteristic absorption peaks in the mid-IR regime. The combination of CMOS-compatible planar mid-IR microphotonics, and a high-throughput nanofluidic sensor system, provides a unique platform for chemical detection.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24328355 DOI: 10.1021/nl403817z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189