Title :
Nonlinear Label-Free Biosensing With High Sensitivity Using As2S3 Chalcogenide Tapered Fiber
Author :
Markos, Christos ; Bang, Ole
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Photonics Eng., Tech. Univ. of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark
Abstract :
We demonstrate an experimentally feasible fiber design, which can act as a highly sensitive, label-free, and selective biosensor using the inherent high nonlinearity of an As2S3 chalcogenide tapered fiber. The surface immobilization of the fiber with an antigen layer can provide the possibility to selectively capture antibody biomolecules. This increase of the layer thickness directly affects the group velocity dispersion of the fiber and, thus, the modulation instability (MI) gain spectrum changes (location of the anti-Stokes and Stokes wavelengths) when pumping the fiber close to the zero-dispersion wavelength. The sensitivity of the sensor was predicted to be ~18 nm/nm, defined as the shift in resonance wavelength per nanometer biolayer thickness, which is almost twice the current record sensitivity of nonlinear MI-based fiber optical biosensors. Importantly, due to the strong nonlinearity of As2S3, this high sensitivity can be obtained using a low-power 1064-nm microchip laser.
Keywords :
arsenic compounds; biochemistry; biological techniques; biosensors; chemical sensors; fibre optic sensors; materials preparation; microchip lasers; molecular biophysics; proteins; spectrochemical analysis; surface treatment; As2S3 chalcogenide tapered fiber nonlinearity; As2S3; MI gain spectrum change; anti-Stokes wavelength location; antigen layer immobilization; antigen layer thickness effect; antigen layer thickness increase; experimentally feasible fiber design; fiber group velocity dispersion; fiber pumping; high sensitivity biosensor; low-power microchip laser; modulation instability; nanometer biolayer thickness; nonlinear MI-based fiber optical biosensor sensitivity; nonlinear label-free biosensing; resonance wavelength shift; selective antibody biomolecule capture; selective biosensor; sensor sensitivity prediction; wavelength 1064 nm; zero-dispersion wavelength; Biosensors; Optical fiber dispersion; Optical fiber sensors; Sensitivity; Biosensors; Fiber nonlinear optics; Four-wave mixing; Optical fiber sensors; fiber nonlinear optics; four-wave mixing; optical fiber sensors;
Journal_Title :
Lightwave Technology, Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JLT.2015.2420655