Ultra-sensitive plasmo-photonic MZI based refractive index sensor
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Titre | Ultra-sensitive plasmo-photonic MZI based refractive index sensor |
Type de publication | Conference Paper |
Year of Publication | 2019 |
Auteurs | Manolis A., Chatzianagnostou E., Dabos G., Markey L., Weeber J-C, Dereux A., Giesecke A-L, Porschatis C., Chmielak B, Pleros N., Tsiokos D. |
Editor | GarciaBlanco SM, Cheben P |
Conference Name | INTEGRATED OPTICS: DEVICES, MATERIALS, AND TECHNOLOGIES XXIII |
Publisher | SPIE |
Conference Location | 1000 20TH ST, PO BOX 10, BELLINGHAM, WA 98227-0010 USA |
ISBN Number | 978-1-5106-2485-6 |
Mots-clés | integrated sensors, interferometric sensors, plasmonics, refractive index sensor, surface plasmons |
Résumé | Plasmonic sensors, leveraging the profound exposure of propagating Surface-Plasmon-Polariton (SPP) modes over metal stripes to test analytes, became so far the ``gold-standard'' in plasmonic biosensing resulting in commercial available devices. However, a series of challenges associated with their bulky prism-based coupling configuration as well as their high optical losses need to be overcome in order to allow for miniaturized and multiplexed sensor layouts. In this context, selective co-integration of plasmonics with low-loss silicon-nitride photonics emerges as a promising solution towards addressing these challenges yet reaping the benefits from both technologies. In this work, we present an interferometric sensor based on a Mach-Zehnder device, where a ``plasmo-photonic'' waveguide branch is utilized to interrogate changes in the refractive index of a test analyte exploiting the accumulated phase change of the SPP mode being exposed in an aqueous solution. More specifically, the ``plasmo-photonic'' Mach-Zehnder sensor incorporates a gold plasmonic stripe with a length of 70 mu m and a width of 7 mu m that has been interfaced with Si3N4 waveguides by means of a butt-coupled interface. By conducting numerical simulations and considering the dispersion properties of the involved materials, we optimized the structural parameters of the sensor aiming at ultra-high bulk sensitivity in the order of micrometres per Refractive Index Unit (RIU). |
DOI | 10.1117/12.2510041 |