4.8 Article

High-sensitivity hemoglobin detection based on polarization-differential spectrophotometry

Journal

BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
Volume 241, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2023.115667

Keywords

Spectrophotometry; Polarization difference; Hemoglobin; High-sensitivity; Single-frequency fiber laser

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This study presents a novel strategy for high-sensitivity hemoglobin detection, utilizing polarization-differential spectrophotometry and high-performance single-frequency green fiber laser. By accurately extracting the two-dimensional information of intensity and polarization during the interaction between laser and hemoglobin, and reducing scattered disturbance, the detection sensitivity of trace hemoglobin content has been significantly improved. This technology holds promising applications in precision medicine and early diagnosis.
Hemoglobin content is recognized as a momentous and fundamental physiological indicator, especially the precise detection of trace hemoglobin is of great significance for early diagnosis and prevention of tumors, cancer, organic injury, etc. Therefore, high-sensitivity hemoglobin detection is imperative. However, effective detection methods and reliable detection systems are still lacking and remain enormous challenges. Herein, we present a synthetical strategy to break through the existing bottleneck based on polarization-differential spectrophotometry and high-performance single-frequency green fiber laser. Importantly, this framework not only has precisely extracted the two-dimensional information of intensity and polarization during the interaction between laser and hemoglobin, but also has taken advantage of the high monochromaticity and fine directivity in the optimized laser source to reduce the undesirable scattered disturbance. Thus, the hemoglobin detection sensitivity of 7.2 x 10-5 g/L has advanced a hundredfold compared with conventional spectrophotometry, and the responsive dynamic range is close to six orders of magnitude. Results indicate that our technology can realize high-sensitivity detection of trace hemoglobin content, holding promising applications for precision medicine and early diagnosis as an optical direct and fast detection method.

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