4.6 Article

Surface Plasmon Scattering in Exposed Core Optical Fiber for Enhanced Resolution Refractive Index Sensing

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 15, Issue 10, Pages 25090-25102

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s151025090

Keywords

microstructured optical fiber; surface plasmon resonance; surface plasmon scattering; plasmonics; biosensing

Funding

  1. Tanya M. Monro's ARC Georgina Sweet Laureate Fellowship
  2. ARC Centre for Nanoscale BioPhotonics (CNBP)
  3. SA State Government

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Refractometric sensors based on optical excitation of surface plasmons on the side of an optical fiber is an established sensing architecture that has enabled laboratory demonstrations of cost effective portable devices for biological and chemical applications. Here we report a Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) configuration realized in an Exposed Core Microstructured Optical Fiber (ECF) capable of optimizing both sensitivity and resolution. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of fabrication of a rough metal coating suitable for spectral interrogation of scattered plasmonic wave using chemical electroless plating technique on a 10 mu m diameter exposed core of the ECF. Performance of the sensor in terms of its refractive index sensitivity and full width at half maximum (F W H M) of SPR response is compared to that achieved with an unstructured bare core fiber with 140 mu m core diameter. The experimental improvement in F W H M, and therefore the detection limit, is found to be a factor of two (75 nm for ECF in comparison to 150 nm for the large core fiber). Refractive index sensitivity of 1800 nm/R I U was achieved for both fibers in the sensing range of aqueous environment (1.33-1.37) suitable for biosensing applications.

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