4.5 Article

Surface plasmon resonance waveguide biosensor by bipolarization wavelength interrogation

Journal

IEEE PHOTONICS TECHNOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 16, Issue 7, Pages 1715-1717

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/LPT.2004.828376

Keywords

biosensor; integrated optics; optical waveguide; surface plasmon resonance (SPR)

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A new surface-plasmon-resonance (SPR) waveguide biosensor with the capability of bipolarization wavelength interrogation is presented. In the conventional SPR biosensors, only the transverse magnetic (TM)-polarized lightwave can couple with the surface plasma wave. The proposed SPR biosensor can make both the TM- and the transverse electric (TE)-polarized lightwave to produce the SPR. Therefore, two kinds of biomaterials can be separately detected by the signals from the TM- and the TE-polarized modes, and the number of detectable materials in a single chip can be doubled. Human serum albumin is coated on the device to sense the concentration of beta-blocker. Experimental results show that the concentration of beta-blocker is related to the SPR wavelength shift at a rate of 0.08 and 0.027 nm/ppm for the TM- and the TE-polarized modes, respectively.

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