4.6 Review

Dielectric metasurfaces for next-generation optical biosensing: a comparison with plasmonic sensing

Journal

NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 40, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6528/ace117

Keywords

dielectric metasurface; plasmonics; nanophotonics; biosensing; point-of-care; Mie resonance; bound states in the continuum

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In the past decades, nanophotonic biosensors have evolved from plasmonic platforms to dielectric metasurfaces, which provide comparable sensitivity with superior resonance properties. Dielectric metasurfaces solve issues related to plasmonic photothermal effect, offering better repeatability, stability, and biocompatibility. This review discusses high-Q resonances based on different physical phenomena tailored by meta-atom geometric designs, and highlights the use of dielectric metasurfaces in refractometric, surface-enhanced, and chiral sensing for various biomedical and diagnostic applications. The review also explores the potential of hyperspectral imaging and single metasurface integration for improved biomolecular sensing and simplified optical output engineering, as well as provides perspectives on future development in metasurface nanofabrication, functionalization, material, configuration, and integration towards next-generation optical biosensing.
In the past decades, nanophotonic biosensors have been extended from the extensively studied plasmonic platforms to dielectric metasurfaces. Instead of plasmonic resonance, dielectric metasurfaces are based on Mie resonance, and provide comparable sensitivity with superior resonance bandwidth, Q factor, and figure-of-merit. Although the plasmonic photothermal effect is beneficial in many biomedical applications, it is a fundamental limitation for biosensing. Dielectric metasurfaces solve the ohmic loss and heating problems, providing better repeatability, stability, and biocompatibility. We review the high-Q resonances based on various physical phenomena tailored by meta-atom geometric designs, and compare dielectric and plasmonic metasurfaces in refractometric, surface-enhanced, and chiral sensing for various biomedical and diagnostic applications. Departing from conventional spectral shift measurement using spectrometers, imaging-based and spectrometer-less biosensing are highlighted, including single-wavelength refractometric barcoding, surface-enhanced molecular fingerprinting, and integrated visual reporting. These unique modalities enabled by dielectric metasurfaces point to two important research directions. On the one hand, hyperspectral imaging provides massive information for smart data processing, which not only achieve better biomolecular sensing performance than conventional ensemble averaging, but also enable real-time monitoring of cellular or microbial behaviour in physiological conditions. On the other hand, a single metasurface can integrate both functions of sensing and optical output engineering, using single-wavelength or broadband light sources, which provides simple, fast, compact, and cost-effective solutions. Finally, we provide perspectives in future development on metasurface nanofabrication, functionalization, material, configuration, and integration, towards next-generation optical biosensing for ultra-sensitive, portable/wearable, lab-on-a-chip, point-of-care, multiplexed, and scalable applications.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available