Ultrahigh-Sensitivity Molecular Sensing with Carbon Nanotube Terahertz Metamaterials.
Ruiqian WangWendao XuDinghao ChenRuiyun ZhouQi WangWeilu GaoJunichiro KonoLijuan XieYibin YingPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2020)
Terahertz (THz) electromagnetic waves strongly interact with complex molecules, making THz spectroscopy a promising tool for high-sensitivity molecular detection, especially for biomedical applications. Metamaterials are typically used for enhancing THz-molecule interactions to achieve higher sensitivities. However, a primary challenge in THz molecular sensing based on metallic metamaterials is the limited tunability of optical constants of metals. Here, we present an ultrahigh-sensitivity molecular sensor based on carbon nanotube (CNT) THz metamaterials. The sensor, consisting of a CNT cut-wire array on a Si substrate prepared by a novel two-step method, exhibits a reflectance resonance whose frequency strongly varies with the substrate composition, geometries of periodic arrays, and analyte composition. We used this sensor to detect glucose, lactose, and chlorpyrifos-methyl molecules, achieving limit-of-detection values of 30, 40, and 10 ng/mL (S/N = 3), respectively, higher than that of metallic metamaterials by 2 orders of magnitude. We attribute this ultrahigh sensitivity to the high conductivity of CNTs and the efficient adsorption of the target analyte by CNTs through van der Waals forces and π-π stacking. These easy-to-fabricate CNT-based THz metamaterials pave the way for versatile and reliable ultrahigh-sensitivity THz molecular detection.