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Topographically Flat Nanoplasmonic Sensor Chips for Biosensing and Materials Science.

Ferry Anggoro Ardy NugrohoRickard FrostTomasz J AntosiewiczJoachim FritzscheElin M Larsson LanghammerChristoph Langhammer
Published in: ACS sensors (2016)
Nanoplasmonic sensors typically comprise arrangements of noble metal nanoparticles on a dielectric support. Thus, they are intrinsically characterized by surface topography with corrugations at the 10-100 nm length scale. While irrelevant in some bio- and chemosensing applications, it is also to be expected that the surface topography significantly influences the interaction between solids, fluids, nanoparticles and (bio)molecules, and the nanoplasmonic sensor surface. To address this issue, we present a wafer-scale nanolithography-based fabrication approach for high-temperature compatible, chemically inert, topographically flat, and laterally homogeneous nanoplasmonic sensor chips. We demonstrate their sensing performance on three different examples, for which we also carry out a direct comparison with a traditional nanoplasmonic sensor with representative surface corrugation. Specifically, we (i) quantify the film-thickness dependence of the glass transition temperature in poly(methyl metacrylate) thin films, (ii) characterize the adsorption and specific binding kinetics of the avidin-biotinylated bovine serum albumin protein system, and (iii) analyze supported lipid bilayer formation on SiO2 surfaces.
Keyphrases
  • high temperature
  • photodynamic therapy
  • low cost
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • cystic fibrosis
  • gold nanoparticles
  • amino acid
  • aqueous solution