4.8 Article

Metal-Free, Graphene Oxide-Based Tunable Soliton and Plasmon Engineering for Biosensing Applications

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 14, Pages 17046-17061

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c01024

Keywords

graphene oxide plasmon-coupled emission; graphene oxide plasmon-coupled soliton emission; surface plasmon-coupled emission; nanointerface; Purcell factor; human IFN-gamma biosensor

Funding

  1. Tata Education and Development Trust [TEDT/MUM/HEA/SSSIHL/2017-2018/0069-RM-db]
  2. Prasanthi Trust, Inc. [2206-2018]
  3. DST-Technology Development Program [IDP/MED/19/2016]
  4. Life Sciences Research Board (LSRB)
  5. DRDO -Defence Research and Development Organization [O/o DG/81/48222/LSRB-337/BTB/2018]
  6. DST-Inspire Research Fellowship, Govt. of India [IF180392]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study demonstrates a quest for auxiliary plasmonic materials with lossless properties by utilizing a unique plasmonic response from stratified high refractive index-graphene oxide and low refractive index-polymethyl methacrylate multistack. The platform achieved a zero-normal steering emission and directional graphene oxide plasmon-coupled emission, and showed potential for diverse biosensing applications. Experimental validation of the platform's superiority in achieving a low detection limit of human IFN-gamma was conducted, along with significant fluorescence emission enhancements on a lossless substrate using various nanoparticles, paving the way for unique light-matter interactions for next-generation plasmonic and biomedical technologies.
The quest for auxiliary plasmonic materials with lossless properties began in the past decade. In the current study, a unique plasmonic response is demonstrated from a stratified high refractive index (HRI)-graphene oxide (GO) and low refractive index (LRI)-polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) multistack. Graphene oxide plasmon-coupled emission (GraPE) reveals the existence of strong surface states on the terminating layer of the photonic crystal (PC) framework. The chemical defects in GO thin film are conducive for unraveling plasmon hybridization within and across the multistack. We have achieved a unique assortment of metal-dielectric-metal (MDM) ensuing a zero-normal steering emission on account of solitons as well as directional GraPE. This has been theoretically established and experimentally demonstrated with a metal-free design. The angle-dependent reflectivity plots, electric field energy (EFI) profiles, and finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) analysis from the simulations strongly support plasmonic modes with giant Purcell factors (PFs). The architecture presented prospects for the replacement of metal-dependent MDM and surface plasmon-coupled emission (SPCE) technology with low cost, easy to fabricate, tunable soliton [graphene oxide plasmon-coupled soliton emission (GraSE)], and plasmon [GraPE] engineering for diverse biosensing applications. The superiority of the GraPE platform for achieving 1.95 pg mL(-1) limit of detection of human IFN-gamma is validated experimentally. A variety of nanoparticles encompassing metals, intermetallics, rare-earth, and low-dimensional carbon-plasmonic hybrids were used to comprehend PF and cavity hot-spot contribution resulting in 900-fold fluorescence emission enhancements on a lossless substrate, thereby opening the door to unique light-matter interactions for next-gen plasmonic and biomedical technologies.

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