Mid-ultraviolet light-emitting diode detects dipicolinic acid

Dipicolinic acid (DPA, 2,6-pyridinedicarboxylic acid) is a substance uniquely present in bacterial spores such as that from anthrax (B. anthracis). It is known that DPA can be detected by the long-lived fluorescence of its terbium chelate; the best limit of detection (LOD) reported thus far using a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied spectroscopy 2005-06, Vol.58 (11)
Hauptverfasser: Bogart, Katherine Huderle Andersen, Lee, Stephen Roger, Temkin, Henryk, Crawford, Mary Hagerott, Dasgupta, Purnendu K., Li, Qingyang, Allerman, Andrew Alan, Fischer, Arthur Joseph
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dipicolinic acid (DPA, 2,6-pyridinedicarboxylic acid) is a substance uniquely present in bacterial spores such as that from anthrax (B. anthracis). It is known that DPA can be detected by the long-lived fluorescence of its terbium chelate; the best limit of detection (LOD) reported thus far using a large benchtop gated fluorescence instrument using a pulsed Xe lamp is 2 nM. We use a novel AlGaN light-emitting diode (LED) fabricated on a sapphire substrate that has peak emission at 291 nm. Although the overlap of the emission band of this LED with the absorption band of Tb-DPA ({lambda}{sub max} doublet: 273, 279 nm) is not ideal, we demonstrate that a compact detector based on this LED and an off-the-shelf gated photodetection module can provide an LOD of 0.4 nM, thus providing a basis for convenient early warning detectors.
ISSN:0003-7028
1943-3530