Title :
Photonic crystal nanoslot nanolaser for super-sensitivity bio-sensing
Author :
Baba, Toshihiko ; Kita, S. ; Hachuda, Shoji ; Otsuka, Shota
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Yokohama Nat. Univ., Yokohama, Japan
Abstract :
High-performance and low-cost sensors are critical devices for high-throughput analyses of bio-samples in medical diagnoses and life sciences. This report demonstrates GaInAsP photonic crystal nanolaser sensor, which detects the adsorption of bio-molecules from the lasing wavelength shift. It is a promising device, which balances a high sensitivity, high resolution, small size, easy integration, simple setup and low cost. In particular with a nanoslot structure, it achieves a super-sensitivity in protein sensing whose detection limit is 3-5 orders of magnitude lower than that of standard surface-plasmon-resonance sensors, e.g. ~ 100 fM order for BSA and <; 1 aM for streptavidin. Our investigations suggest a candidate mechanism that the nanoslot acts as a protein condenser powered by the optical gradient force, which arises from the strong localization of laser mode in the nanoslot.
Keywords :
III-V semiconductors; adsorption; biosensors; gallium compounds; indium compounds; laser modes; photonic crystals; proteins; GaInAsP; adsorption detection; bio-molecules; laser mode; optical gradient force; photonic crystal nanolaser sensor; photonic crystal nanoslot nanolaser; protein condenser; protein sensing; streptavidin; super-sensitivity bio-sensing; Biomedical optical imaging; Cavity resonators; Optical sensors; Photonic crystals; Proteins; Sensitivity; bio-marker detection; bio-sensing; nanolaser; nanoslot; photonic crystals;
Conference_Titel :
Transparent Optical Networks (ICTON), 2012 14th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Coventry
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2228-7
Electronic_ISBN :
2161-2056
DOI :
10.1109/ICTON.2012.6253863