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Design and development of optical sensors for the detection of specific targets, e.g., ions, molecules, proteins, light polarizations, is one of the most essential research topics in the field of nanophotonics that paves the way for significant technological progressions in chemical and biomarker detections, polarimetric imaging and other sensing related

Design and development of optical sensors for the detection of specific targets, e.g., ions, molecules, proteins, light polarizations, is one of the most essential research topics in the field of nanophotonics that paves the way for significant technological progressions in chemical and biomarker detections, polarimetric imaging and other sensing related applications. In this dissertation, three designs of optical sensors based on plasmonic and dielectric nanostructures are thoroughly studied for the applications in chemicals, biomarkers and light polarization detection. Firstly, a plasmonic nanoantenna structure, which is composed of complementary anisotropic nanobars and nanoapertures featuring strong localized electric field enhancement at nanogap region, demonstrates both high sensitivity refractometric detection and specific infrared fingerprint detection for chemical sensing. Specifically, the sensor can probe monolayer thin octadecanethiol with a large resonance shift of 136 nm and all four characteristic infrared fingerprints detected. Secondly, a bio-inspired double-layered metasurface structure, which is made of dielectric nanoantenna and plasmonic nanogratings, mediates strong optical chirality and enables the selection of circularly polarized light handedness (extinction ratio ≥ 35) with high transmission efficiency (≥ 80%). The structure can be further integrated on-chip with linear polarizers for highly precise full-Stokes polarimetric detection with minimum transmission loss. Lastly, a gold nanoparticle based colorimetric assay is designed for high sensitivity, specificity and rapid detection of infectious diseases related biomarkers. The complete design workflows from critical reagents productions, rapid detection protocol to assay characterizations are extensively studied. Detection of Ebola virus disease biomarker, secreted glycoprotein, within 20 minutes are experimentally demonstrated with limit of detection down to ~40 pM and a broad detection range from 10 pM to 1 µM. The designs of the three sensors propose novel and versatile design concepts for the development of sensing devices in the detection of chemicals, biomarkers and light polarization. The efforts in the fundamental theoretical analysis and experimental demonstrations are expected to provide valuable contents to the optical sensor researches and to potentially inspire new sensor designs for broad sensing applications in the future.
ContributorsChen, Xiahui (Author) / Wang, Chao (Thesis advisor) / Zhao, Yuji (Committee member) / Wang, Liping (Committee member) / Goryll, Michael (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021