AI Article Synopsis

  • Optical whispering-gallery-mode resonators (WGMRs) offer a platform for ultra-sensitive detection of nano-objects by optimizing light-matter interaction through the quality factor/mode volume relationship.
  • This study presents a novel method using Raman gain-assisted loss compensation to enhance the detection of individual nanoparticles, achieving sensitivity without the need for external dopants or active stabilization.
  • The approach retains the biocompatibility of silica and allows customization for various sensing environments by adjusting the pump laser wavelength, potentially benefiting diverse applications beyond biological media.

Article Abstract

Optical whispering-gallery-mode resonators (WGMRs) have emerged as promising platforms for label-free detection of nano-objects. The ultimate sensitivity of WGMRs is determined by the strength of the light-matter interaction quantified by quality factor/mode volume, Q/V, and the resolution is determined by Q. To date, to improve sensitivity and precision of detection either WGMRs have been doped with rare-earth ions to compensate losses and increase Q or plasmonic resonances have been exploited for their superior field confinement and lower V. Here, we demonstrate, for the first time to our knowledge, enhanced detection of single-nanoparticle-induced mode splitting in a silica WGMR via Raman gain-assisted loss compensation and WGM Raman microlaser. In particular, the use of the Raman microlaser provides a dopant-free, self-referenced, and self-heterodyned scheme with a detection limit ultimately determined by the thermorefractive noise. Notably, we detected and counted individual nanoparticles with polarizabilities down to 3.82 × 10(-6) μm(3) by monitoring a heterodyne beatnote signal. This level of sensitivity is achieved without exploiting plasmonic effects, external references, or active stabilization and frequency locking. Single nanoparticles are detected one at a time; however, their characterization by size or polarizability requires ensemble measurements and statistical averaging. This dopant-free scheme retains the inherited biocompatibility of silica and could find widespread use for sensing in biological media. The Raman laser and operation band of the sensor can be tailored for the specific sensing environment and the properties of the targeted materials by changing the pump laser wavelength. This scheme also opens the possibility of using intrinsic Raman or parametric gain for loss compensation in other systems where dissipation hinders progress and limits applications.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4169974PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1408283111DOI Listing

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