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Photonic wire biosensor microarray chip and instrumentation with application to serotyping of Escherichia coli isolates

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TLDR
A complete photonic wire molecular biosensor microarray chip architecture and supporting instrumentation is described, used to demonstrate a multiplexed assay for serotyping E. coli bacteria using serospecific polyclonal antibody probe molecules.
Abstract
A complete photonic wire molecular biosensor microarray chip architecture and supporting instrumentation is described. Chip layouts with 16 and 128 independent sensors have been fabricated and tested, where each sensor can provide an independent molecular binding curve. Each sensor is 50 μm in diameter, and consists of a millimeter long silicon photonic wire waveguide folded into a spiral ring resonator. An array of 128 sensors occupies a 2 × 2 mm2 area on a 6 × 9 mm2 chip. Microfluidic sample delivery channels are fabricated monolithically on the chip. The size and layout of the sensor array is fully compatible with commercial spotting tools designed to independently functionalize fluorescence based biochips. The sensor chips are interrogated using an instrument that delivers sample fluid to the chip and is capable of acquiring up to 128 optical sensor outputs simultaneously and in real time. Coupling light from the sensor chip is accomplished through arrays of sub-wavelength surface grating couplers, and the signals are collected by a fixed two-dimensional detector array. The chip and instrument are designed so that connection of the fluid delivery system and optical alignment are automated, and can be completed in a few seconds with no active user input. This microarray system is used to demonstrate a multiplexed assay for serotyping E. coli bacteria using serospecific polyclonal antibody probe molecules.

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Silicon Photonics Design: From Devices to Systems

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Structure and reactivity of alkylsiloxane monolayers formed by reaction of alkyltrichlorosilanes on silicon substrates

TL;DR: In this article, the authors characterized the properties of ordered alkylsiloxane monolayer films and showed that they were stable in common organic solvents, water, and acid, but were destroyed by prolonged exposure to base.
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Universal relations for coupling of optical power between microresonators and dielectric waveguides

TL;DR: In this article, the fundamental working equations required to describe the associated power transfer are derived and the application of this geometry to a variety of optical phenomena including add/dropping of optical beams, add/drop filtering and optical power switching are discussed.
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Silicon-on-Insulator microring resonator for sensitive and label-free biosensing

TL;DR: This work proposes a label-free biosensor based on microring cavities in Silicon-on-Insulator (SOI) that fits in an area below 10x10mum(2), and uses the avidin/biotin high affinity couple to demonstrate good repeatability and detection of protein concentrations down to 10ng/ml.
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Sensitivity of grating couplers as integrated-optical chemical sensors

TL;DR: In this paper, a theory of the sensor sensitivities is developed; conditions for the waveguide parameters in order to obtain high sensitivities are derived; and it is shown that effects (1) and (2) can be distinguished by measurements of the effective index changes of both the TE0 and the TM0 modes.
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Biochemical sensors based on polymer microrings with sharp asymmetrical resonance

TL;DR: In this article, a microring resonator with increased resonance slopes is proposed by introducing two partially reflecting elements implemented by waveguide offsets, which can greatly enhance the sensitivity of the sensor.
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