Title :
Label-free bacteria detection using evanescent mode of a suspended core terahertz fiber
Author :
Mazhorova, Anna ; Markov, Andrey ; Ung, Bora ; Ng, Andy ; Chinnappan, Raja ; Zourob, Mohammed ; Skorobogatiy, Maksim
Author_Institution :
Genie Phys., Ecole Polytech. de Montreal, Montreal, QC, Canada
Abstract :
We propose for the first time an E. coli bacteria sensor based on the evanescent field of the fundamental mode of a suspended-core terahertz fiber. The sensor is capable of E. coli detection at concentrations in the range of 104-109 cfu/ml. The polyethylene fiber features a 150 μm core suspended by three deeply sub-wavelength bridges in the center of a 5.1 mm-diameter cladding tube. The fiber core is biofunctionalized with T4 bacteriophages which bind and eventually destroy (lyse) their bacterial target. Using environmental SEM we demonstrate that E. coli is first captured by the phages on the fiber surface. After 25 minutes, most of the bacteria is infected by phages and then destroyed with ~1μm-size fragments remaining bound to the fiber surface. The bacteria-binding and subsequent lysis unambiguously correlate with a strong increase of the fiber absorption. This signal allows the detection and quantification of bacteria concentration. Presented bacteria detection method is label-free and it does not rely on the presence of any bacterial “fingerprint” features in the THz spectrum.
Keywords :
bioMEMS; biosensors; fibre optic sensors; microorganisms; microsensors; polymer fibres; scanning electron microscopy; terahertz wave detectors; terahertz wave spectra; E. coil bacteria sensor; T4 bacteriophage biofunctionalization; THz spectrum; bacteria binding; bacteria concentration; bacteria quantification; bacterial fingerprint features; cladding tube; environmental SEM; evanescent mode; fiber absorption; label-free bacteria detection; polyethylene fiber; scanning electron microscopy; size 150 mum; size 5.1 mm; subsequent lysis; suspended core terahertz fiber; time 25 min; Absorption; Atmospheric measurements; Microorganisms; Optical fiber sensors; Optical surface waves; Optical waveguides; Particle measurements;
Conference_Titel :
Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO), 2012 Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Jose, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1839-6