4.7 Article

Microbubble Resonators for Photoacoustic Detection and Photothermal Spectroscopy

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 41, Issue 13, Pages 4137-4144

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JLT.2023.3240698

Keywords

Whispering gallery mode resonators; Microbubble resonators; Photothermal spectroscopy; Photoacoustic spectroscopy; Photoacoustic contrast agents

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Optical microresonators based on Whispering Gallery Modes have been extensively studied for fundamental research and various applications. Microbubbles resonators made from glass capillaries combine high optical and mechanical Q-factors with microfluidics. In this study, they were used as platforms for photoacoustic detection and photothermal spectroscopy, demonstrating their unique capabilities.
Optical microresonators based on Whispering Gallery Modes have been extensively investigated as unique tools for fundamental studies and as core components in several applications. Specifically, microbubbles resonators (MBR) made from glass capillaries combine high optical and mechanical Q-factors together with intrinsic microfluidics, and in this work we demonstrate them as unique platforms for photoacoustic (PA) detection and photothermal (PT) spectroscopy. In a first configuration, we employed a MBR as an optical transducer to detect the PA signal generated by a suspension of gold nanorods (GNRs) placed within the MBR, demonstrating all-optical PA detection and high sensitivity towards nanoparticles optical absorption. The MBR acts both as the ultrasound sensor and as the microvial, enabling the inspection of submicroliter samples without the need for impedance-matching media. We then present a flow cytometry experiment where the GNRs run through the MBR, and we estimate PA intensity by a Fourier analysis of the read-out signal. The sharp MBR mechanical eigenmodes allowed to easily decouple the environmental noise from the PA contributions. In a second proof-of-concept experiment using a similar setup, we implemented the MBR transducer to reconstruct the GNRs absorption spectrum through the photothermal conversion. The high sensitivity of the MBR towards temperature variations allowed for the interrogation of small samples while using a low-intensity beam for their excitation. This thermal detection produces spectra that are insensitive towards light scattering in the sample, as proved experimentally by comparing the spectra of aqueous GNR suspensions in the presence or absence of milk powder.

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