Rapid chemical-vapor sensing using optofluidic ring resonators.

Opt Lett

Department of Biological Engineering, 240D Bond Life Sciences Center, 1201 E. Rollins Street, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211, USA.

Published: April 2008

We develop rapid chemical-vapor sensors based on optofluidic ring resonators (OFRRs). The OFRR is a glass capillary whose circular wall supports the circulating waveguide modes (WGMs). The OFRR inner surface is coated with a vapor-sensitive polymer. The analyte and polymer interaction causes the polymer refractive index to change, which is detected as a WGM spectral shift. Owing to the excellent fluidics, the OFRR exhibits subsecond detection and recovery time with a flow rate of only 1 mL/min, a few orders of magnitude lower than that in the existing optical vapor sensors. The detection limit is estimated to be 5.6 x 10(-6) refractive index units, over ten times better than other ring-resonator vapor sensors. Ethanol and hexane vapors are used as a model system, and chemical differentiation is demonstrated with different polymer coatings.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/ol.33.000788DOI Listing

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