open access publication

Article, 2024

Effectively detecting cardiac myoglobin by use of bound states in the continuum in silicon nitride gratings

Journal of Applied Physics, ISSN 0021-8979, 1089-7550, Volume 135, 22, Page 223101, 10.1063/5.0208969

Contributors

Beliaev, Leonid Y 0000-0002-5695-4896 [1] Takayama, Osamu 0000-0003-3525-3262 [1] Xiao, Sanshui 0000-0001-6529-5047 (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Technical University of Denmark
  2. [NORA names: DTU Technical University of Denmark; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Optical biosensors with their sensitivity, compact design, and reliability stand out as versatile tools capable of detecting a wide range of analytes. Recently, nanophotonic structures supporting bound states in the continuum (BIC) modes have been actively studied, which is especially interesting for biosensing applications due to their high quality (Q) factor and strongly localized electric field, achieving favorable interaction between field and nanometer scale analyte on the sensing surface. Herein, we demonstrate an optical label-free sensing by accidental or Friedrich–Wintgen (FW) BIC supported on silicon nitride gratings. We compared the sensing performance in terms of bulk, and surface sensitivity, and figure of merit with FW-BIC in the leaky regime and with a symmetry-protected (SP) BIC, which are also supported by the studied platform. We exploit the fact that for FW-BIC a high-Q factor up to 498 comparable to that of SP-BIC (up to 425) retains for a much larger set of interrogation angles, providing excellent interrogation stability. We observed that FW-BIC has slightly higher bulk sensitivity than SP-BIC [186 and 158 nm/RIU (refractive index unit), respectively], but at the same time similar characteristics in terms of surface sensitivity and figure of merit. In addition, we show that both BIC resonances are significantly superior in all respects to the leaky regime due to better field confinement. Finally, the surface of sensing device was also functionalized to detect a cardiac biomarker, myoglobin, exhibiting the limit of detection of 49 ng/ml with clinically relevant level.

Keywords

BIC, BIC resonances, FW BICs, Friedrich-Wintgen, Friedrich-Wintgen (FW, SP-BICs, analytes, angle, applications, biomarkers, biosensing, biosensing applications, biosensor, bound states, bulk, cardiac biomarkers, cardiac myoglobin, characteristics, clinic, clinically relevant levels, compact design, continuum, design, detection, devices, electric field, factors, field, grating, high Q factor, high quality, high-Q, interaction, interrogation, interrogation angle, label-free sensing, leaky regime, levels, limit of detection, limitations, local electric field, myoglobin, nanophotonic structures, optical biosensors, performance, platform, quality, regime, relevant levels, reliability, resonance, sensing, sensing devices, sensing performance, sensing surface, sensitivity, silicon, silicon nitride grating, similar characteristics, stability, state, structure, surface, surface sensitivity, time, tools

Funders

  • Danish National Research Foundation
  • Novo Nordisk Foundation

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