DocumentCode
1102815
Title
An evanescent wave biosensor. II. Fluorescent signal acquisition from tapered fiber optic probes
Author
Golden, Joel P. ; Anderson, George P. ; Rabbany, Sina Y. ; Ligler, Frances S.
Author_Institution
Center for Bio/Molecular Sci. & Eng., Naval Res. Lab., Washington, DC, USA
Volume
41
Issue
6
fYear
1994
fDate
6/1/1994 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
585
Lastpage
591
Abstract
For pt.I see ibid., vol.41, no.6, p.578-84 (1994). A biosensor was developed using antibodies, fluorescence and the evanescent wave to detect antigen binding at the surface of an optical fiber. Cladding was removed from the core along the distal end of a step-index optical fiber, and recognition antibodies were immobilized on the declad core to form the probe sensing region. Immersing the declad probe in aqueous solution creates a V-number mismatch between the immersed probe and the clad fiber. Probes created with reduced sensing region radius exhibited improved response by decreasing the V-number mismatch. Tapering the radius of this region has further improved probe response. Ray tracing analysis of the tapered probe demonstrated that the evanescent wave penetration depth increases along the length of the taper. Experiments correlating position of refraction along the taper with launch angle at the proximal end were realized in the ray tracing model. An evanescent wave immunoassay was performed with a series of the tapered fiber probes, each tapered from the fiber core radius (100 μm) to different end radii. An end radius of 29 μm was found to produce maximal signal from the tapered probe. Factors leading to the determination of the optimized probe are discussed.
Keywords
biomedical equipment; biosensors; fibre optic sensors; fluorescence; probes; signal detection; 100 mum; 29 mum; V-number mismatch; antibodies; antigen binding; aqueous solution; clinical instrumentation; declad probe; evanescent wave biosensor; fluorescent signal acquisition; optical fiber surface; ray tracing analysis; step-index optical fiber; tapered fiber optic probes; Biological materials; Biomedical engineering; Biosensors; Fluorescence; Immune system; Optical fibers; Optical waveguides; Probes; Ray tracing; Surface waves; Biosensing Techniques; Equipment Design; Evaluation Studies as Topic; Fiber Optics; Fluorescence Polarization Immunoassay; Sensitivity and Specificity; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/10.293246
Filename
293246
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