Optimized waveguides for mid-infrared lab-on-chip systems: A rigorous design approach
Mid-infrared absorption spectroscopy is a well-established technique for non-destructive quantitative molecular analysis. Waveguide-integrated sensors provide a particularly compact solution operating with reduced sample volumes while exhibiting exquisite molecular selectivity, sensitivity, and ultr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Sensors and actuators. A. Physical. 2024-11, Vol.378, p.115797, Article 115797 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Mid-infrared absorption spectroscopy is a well-established technique for non-destructive quantitative molecular analysis. Waveguide-integrated sensors provide a particularly compact solution operating with reduced sample volumes while exhibiting exquisite molecular selectivity, sensitivity, and ultra-low limits of detection. Recent advances in mid-infrared technologies along with the integration of on-chip sources, detectors and microfluidics, have brought mid-infrared lab-on-chip systems closer to reality. A variety of material platforms has been proposed for the implementation of such systems. However, the lack of a consistent waveguide design approach renders a fair comparison between different alternatives – and a deliberate material selection – challenging, limiting the development of optimized on-chip spectroscopic devices. In the present study, a systematic waveguide design approach has been developed, facilitating evanescent field absorption-based sensing, in particular for aqueous analytes. Our strategy enables a rigorous comparison of several state-of-the-art thin-film waveguides using parametric expressions to predict the achievable limits of detection of the sensing system, while indicating optimum waveguide dimensions and absorption pathlengths, pivotal for the development of next-generation mid-infrared lab-on-chip devices.
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•Rigorous waveguide design approach for mid-infrared spectroscopic sensors.•Fair comparison between different waveguide platforms using a single figure-of-merit.•Optimization strategy for the limit of detection in aqueous samples.•Proposed guidelines may encourage the development of high-performance lab-on-chips. |
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ISSN: | 0924-4247 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.sna.2024.115797 |