4.7 Article

Silicon photonic sensors incorporated in a digital microfluidic system

Journal

ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 404, Issue 10, Pages 2887-2894

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00216-012-6319-6

Keywords

Silicon nanophotonic ring resonator sensors; Silicon-on-insulator; Digital microfluidics; Electrowetting-on-dielectric; Microdroplets

Funding

  1. Flemish Fund for Scientific Research (FWO Vlaanderen) [3G099711]
  2. EFRO Interreg NanosensEU

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Label-free biosensing with silicon nanophotonic microring resonator sensors has proven to be an excellent sensing technique for achieving high-throughput and high sensitivity, comparing favorably with other labeled and label-free sensing techniques. However, as in any biosensing platform, silicon nanophotonic microring resonator sensors require a fluidic component which allows the continuous delivery of the sample to the sensor surface. This component is typically based on microchannels in polydimethylsiloxane or other materials, which add cost and complexity to the system. The use of microdroplets in a digital microfluidic system, instead of continuous flows, is one of the recent trends in the field, where microliter- to picoliter-sized droplets are generated, transported, mixed, and split, thereby creating miniaturized reaction chambers which can be controlled individually in time and space. This avoids cross talk between samples or reagents and allows fluid plugs to be manipulated on reconfigurable paths, which cannot be achieved using the more established and more complex technology of microfluidic channels where droplets are controlled in series. It has great potential for high-throughput liquid handling, while avoiding on-chip cross-contamination. We present the integration of two miniaturized technologies: label-free silicon nanophotonic microring resonator sensors and digital microfluidics, providing an alternative to the typical microfluidic system based on microchannels. The performance of this combined system is demonstrated by performing proof-of-principle measurements of glucose, sodium chloride, and ethanol concentrations. These results show that multiplexed real-time detection and analysis, great flexibility, and portability make the combination of these technologies an ideal platform for easy and fast use in any laboratory.

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