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Design and analysis of a spectro-angular surface plasmon resonance biosensor operating in the visible spectrum
Author(s) -
Sandrine Filion-Côté,
Philip J. R. Roche,
Amir M. Foudeh,
Maryam Tabrizian,
Andrew G. Kirk
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
review of scientific instruments
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.605
H-Index - 165
eISSN - 1089-7623
pISSN - 0034-6748
DOI - 10.1063/1.4894655
Subject(s) - biosensor , surface plasmon resonance , refractive index , optics , materials science , detection limit , sensitivity (control systems) , wavelength , surface plasmon , angular resolution (graph drawing) , optoelectronics , plasmon , physics , nanotechnology , chemistry , nanoparticle , mathematics , combinatorics , chromatography , electronic engineering , engineering
Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) sensing is one of the most widely used methods to implement biosensing due to its sensitivity and capacity for label-free detection. Whilst most commercial SPR sensors operate in the angular regime, it has recently been shown that an increase in sensitivity and a greater robustness against noise can be achieved by measuring the reflectivity when varying both the angle and wavelength simultaneously, in a so-called spectro-angular SPR biosensor. A single value decomposition method is used to project the two-dimensional spectro-angular reflection signal onto a basis set and allow the image obtained from an unknown refractive index sample to be compared very accurately with a pre-calculated reference set. Herein we demonstrate that a previously reported system operated in the near infra-red has a lower detection limit when operating in the visible spectrum due to the improved spatial resolution and numerical precision of the image sensor. The SPR biosensor presented here has an experimental detection limit of 9.8 × 10⁻⁷ refractive index unit. To validate the system as a biosensor, we also performed the detection of synthetic RNA from pathogenic Legionella pneumophila with the developed biosensing platform

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