4.8 Article

Resonant Dielectric Metagratings for Response Intensified Optical Sensing

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 32, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202103143

Keywords

dielectric metasurfaces; diffractive optics; metagratings; optical sensing

Funding

  1. Australia Research Council, Centre of Excellence [CE20010001]
  2. ANU Grand Challenge Scheme, Our Health in Our Hands (OHIOH)
  3. Royal Society
  4. Wolfson Foundation [RSWF\FT\191022]
  5. Human Frontier Science Program [LT000366/2020]
  6. North Atlantic Treaty Organization Science for Peace and Security Program project AMOXES [G5634]
  7. Australian Research Council [DP200101353, FT200100939, DP190101864]

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The development of nanoscale optical sensors is crucial for medical diagnostics and biosensing applications. Optical sensors based on resonant nanostructures and resonant dielectric metagratings offer high sensitivity and direct measurement of unknown analytes without the need for intensity calibrations. These sensors pave the way for novel miniaturized medical diagnostics and biosensing applications.
The development of nanoscale optical sensors is desirable for a broad range of applications, including wearable medical-diagnostics, biochemical detection, and environmental monitoring. Optical detection platforms based on resonant nanostructures are the golden standard for miniaturized footprint and high optical sensitivity. These sensors function by measuring a shift in resonance wavelength upon binding of analytes to their surface. However, such measurements are sensitive to intensity fluctuations of the illuminating source and its wavelength calibration, which limits their applicability. Here, a novel optical sensing concept based on diffraction measurements from resonant dielectric metagratings is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. It is shown that this approach enables the direct measurement of unknown analytes with enhanced sensitivity and without the need for intensity calibrations. The intensified sensitivity of this metagrating-sensor is derived from combining the resonant phenomena of the nanostructures with the tailored diffraction from the metagrating, thereby providing the highest sensitivity demonstrated to date amongst grating-based sensors. As a proof of concept, the metagrating-sensor was validated using an antibody binding assay, achieving a femtomolar-level limit of detection. Due to their high sensitivity and robust performance, the proposed metagrating sensors pave the way for novel miniaturized medical diagnostics and biosensing applications.

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