4.6 Article

Noise Sources and Requirements for Confocal Raman Spectrometers in Biosensor Applications

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 21, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s21155067

Keywords

confocal Raman spectrometer; biosensor; signal-to-noise; bacteria; fluorescence background

Funding

  1. Federal Ministry of Education and Research, Germany (BMBF) [InfectoGnostics (13GW0096A)]

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The study compares and evaluates the performance of different confocal Raman spectrometers in biosensor applications, showing that the sample itself is the most crucial optical component in a Raman spectrometer and demonstrating the potential of mid-range equipment.
Raman spectroscopy probes the biochemical composition of samples in a non-destructive, non-invasive and label-free fashion yielding specific information on a molecular level. Nevertheless, the Raman effect is very weak. The detection of all inelastically scattered photons with highest efficiency is therefore crucial as well as the identification of all noise sources present in the system. Here we provide a study for performance comparison and assessment of different spectrometers for confocal Raman spectroscopy in biosensor applications. A low-cost, home-built Raman spectrometer with a complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) camera, a middle price-class mini charge-coupled device (CCD) Raman spectrometer and a laboratory grade confocal Raman system with a deeply cooled CCD detector are compared. It is often overlooked that the sample itself is the most important optical component in a Raman spectrometer and its properties contribute most significantly to the signal-to-noise ratio. For this purpose, different representative samples: a crystalline silicon wafer, a polypropylene sample and E. coli bacteria were measured under similar conditions using the three confocal Raman spectrometers. We show that biosensor applications do not in every case profit from the most expensive equipment. Finally, a small Raman database of three different bacteria species is set up with the middle price-class mini CCD Raman spectrometer in order to demonstrate the potential of a compact setup for pathogen discrimination.

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