Acoustomicrofluidic Concentration and Signal Enhancement of Fluorescent Nanodiamond Sensors

Diamond nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers constitute a promising class of quantum nanosensors owing to the unique magneto-optic properties associated with their spin states. The large surface area and photostability of diamond nanoparticles, together with their relatively low synthesis costs, make them...

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Veröffentlicht in:Analytical chemistry (Washington) 2021-12, Vol.93 (48), p.16133-16141
Hauptverfasser: Akther, Asma, Walsh, Ella P, Reineck, Philipp, Gibson, Brant C, Ohshima, Takeshi, Abe, Hiroshi, McColl, Gawain, Jenkins, Nicole L, Hall, Liam T, Simpson, David A, Rezk, Amgad R, Yeo, Leslie Y
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Diamond nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers constitute a promising class of quantum nanosensors owing to the unique magneto-optic properties associated with their spin states. The large surface area and photostability of diamond nanoparticles, together with their relatively low synthesis costs, make them a suitable platform for the detection of biologically relevant quantities such as paramagnetic ions and molecules in solution. Nevertheless, their sensing performance in solution is often hampered by poor signal-to-noise ratios and long acquisition times due to distribution inhomogeneities throughout the analyte sample. By concentrating the diamond nanoparticles through an intense microcentrifugation effect in an acoustomicrofluidic device, we show that the resultant dense NV ensembles within the diamond nanoparticles give rise to an order-of-magnitude improvement in the measured acquisition time. The ability to concentrate nanoparticles under surface acoustic wave (SAW) microcentrifugation in a sessile droplet is, in itself, surprising given the well-documented challenge of achieving such an effect for particles below 1 μm in dimension. In addition to a demonstration of their sensing performance, we thus reveal in this work that the reason why the diamond nanoparticles readily concentrate under the SAW-driven recirculatory flow can be attributed to their considerably higher density and hence larger acoustic contrast compared to those for typical particles and cells for which the SAW microcentrifugation flow has been shown to date.
ISSN:0003-2700
1520-6882
DOI:10.1021/acs.analchem.1c03893