| Literature DB >> 34138312 |
Yuye Wang1,2, Shuwen Zeng3,4, Aurelian Crunteanu2, Zhenming Xie1, Georges Humbert2, Libo Ma5, Yuanyuan Wei1, Aude Brunel6, Barbara Bessette6, Jean-Christophe Orlianges2, Fabrice Lalloué6, Oliver G Schmidt5, Nanfang Yu7, Ho-Pui Ho8.
Abstract
HIGHLIGHTS: A zero-reflection-induced phase singularity is achieved through precisely controlling the resonance characteristics using two-dimensional nanomaterials. An atomically thin nano-layer having a high absorption coefficient is exploited to enhance the zero-reflection dip, which has led to the subsequent phase singularity and thus a giant lateral position shift. We have improved the detection limit of low molecular weight molecules by more than three orders of magnitude compared to current state-of-art nanomaterial-enhanced plasmonic sensors. Detection of small cancer biomarkers with low molecular weight and a low concentration range has always been challenging yet urgent in many clinical applications such as diagnosing early-stage cancer, monitoring treatment and detecting relapse. Here, a highly enhanced plasmonic biosensor that can overcome this challenge is developed using atomically thin two-dimensional phase change nanomaterial. By precisely engineering the configuration with atomically thin materials, the phase singularity has been successfully achieved with a significantly enhanced lateral position shift effect. Based on our knowledge, it is the first experimental demonstration of a lateral position signal change > 340 μm at a sensing interface from all optical techniques. With this enhanced plasmonic effect, the detection limit has been experimentally demonstrated to be 10-15 mol L-1 for TNF-α cancer marker, which has been found in various human diseases including inflammatory diseases and different kinds of cancer. The as-reported novel integration of atomically thin Ge2Sb2Te5 with plasmonic substrate, which results in a phase singularity and thus a giant lateral position shift, enables the detection of cancer markers with low molecular weight at femtomolar level. These results will definitely hold promising potential in biomedical application and clinical diagnostics.Entities:
Keywords: 2D nanomaterials; Cancer marker detection; Phase singularity; Surface plasmon
Year: 2021 PMID: 34138312 PMCID: PMC7985234 DOI: 10.1007/s40820-021-00613-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomicro Lett ISSN: 2150-5551