Analyte transport to micro-and nano-plasmonic structures
Journal article, 2019

The study of optical affinity biosensors based on plasmonic nanostructures has received significant attention in recent years. The sensing surfaces of these biosensors have complex architectures, often composed of localized regions of high sensitivity (electromagnetic hot spots) dispersed along a dielectric substrate having little to no sensitivity. Under conditions such that the sensitive regions are selectively functionalized and the remaining regions passivated, the rate of analyte capture (and thus the sensing performance) will have a strong dependence on the nanoplasmonic architecture. Outside of a few recent studies, there has been little discussion on how changes to a nanoplasmonic architecture will affect the rate of analyte transport. We recently proposed an analytical model to predict transport to such complex architectures; however, those results were based on numerical simulation and to date, have only been partially verified. In this study we measure the characteristics of analyte transport across a wide range of plasmonic structures, varying both in the composition of their base plasmonic element (microwires, nanodisks, and nanorods) and the packing density of such elements. We functionalized each structure with nucleic acid-based bioreceptors, where for each structure we used analyte/receptor sequences as to maintain a Damköhler number close to unity. This method allows to extract both kinetic (in the form of association and dissociation constants) and analyte transport parameters (in the form of a mass transfer coefficient) from sensorgrams taken from each substrate. We show that, despite having large differences in optical characteristics, measured rates of analyte transport for all plasmonic structures match very well to predictions using our previously proposed model. These results highlight that, along with optical characteristics, analyte transport plays a large role in the overall sensing performance of a nanoplasmonic biosensor.

Author

N. Scott Lynn

Czech Academy of Sciences

Tomáš Špringer

Czech Academy of Sciences

Jiří Slabý

Czech Academy of Sciences

Barbora Spackova

Czech Academy of Sciences

Michaela Gráfová

Center for Nanotechnology Innovation (CNI)

Czech Academy of Sciences

Maria Laura Ermini

Czech Academy of Sciences

Jiří Homola

Czech Academy of Sciences

Lab on a Chip - Miniaturisation for Chemistry and Biology

1473-0197 (ISSN) 1473-0189 (eISSN)

Vol. 19 24 4117-4127

Subject Categories

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Other Physics Topics

Biophysics

DOI

10.1039/c9lc00699k

PubMed

31740906

More information

Latest update

1/8/2020 1