Magneto-Optic Surface Plasmon Resonance Ti/Au/Co/Au/Pc Configuration and Sensitivity

Magneto-optic surface plasmon resonance (MOSPR)-based sensors are highly attractive as next-generation biosensors. However, these sensors suffer from oxidation leading to degradation of performance, reproducibility of the sensor surface, because of the difficulty of removing adsorbed materials, and...

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Main Author: Conrad Rizal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-08-01
Series:Magnetochemistry
Subjects:
SPR
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2312-7481/4/3/35
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spelling doaj-e7bb1011fbb843a09ce98aada202b6f92020-11-25T00:53:41ZengMDPI AGMagnetochemistry2312-74812018-08-01433510.3390/magnetochemistry4030035magnetochemistry4030035Magneto-Optic Surface Plasmon Resonance Ti/Au/Co/Au/Pc Configuration and SensitivityConrad Rizal0Department of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science, York University, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, CanadaMagneto-optic surface plasmon resonance (MOSPR)-based sensors are highly attractive as next-generation biosensors. However, these sensors suffer from oxidation leading to degradation of performance, reproducibility of the sensor surface, because of the difficulty of removing adsorbed materials, and degradation of the sensor surface during surface cleaning and these limit their applications. In this paper, I propose MOSPR-based biosensors with 0 to 15 nm thick inert polycarbonate laminate plastic as a protective layer and theoretically demonstrate the practicability of my approach in water-medium for three different probing samples: ethanol, propanol, and pentanol. I also investigate microstructure and magnetic properties. The chemical composition and layered information of the sensor are investigated using X-ray reflectivity and X-ray diffraction analyses and these show distinct face-centered-cubic (fcc)-Au (111) phases, as dominated by the higher density of conduction electrons in Au as compared to Co. The magnetic characterization measured with the in-plane magnetic field to the sensor surface for both the as-deposited and annealed multilayers showed isotropic easy axis magnetization parallel to the multilayer interface at a saturating magnetic field of <100 Oersted (Oe). The sensor showed a maximum sensitivity of 5.5 × 104%/RIU (refractive index unit) for water–ethanol media and the highest detection level of 2.5 × 10−6 for water-pentanol media as the protective layer is increased from 0 to 15 nm.http://www.mdpi.com/2312-7481/4/3/35Ti/Au/Co/AuX-ray diffractionSPRMOSPRsensitivitypolycarbonate plasticsprotective layer
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Conrad Rizal
spellingShingle Conrad Rizal
Magneto-Optic Surface Plasmon Resonance Ti/Au/Co/Au/Pc Configuration and Sensitivity
Magnetochemistry
Ti/Au/Co/Au
X-ray diffraction
SPR
MOSPR
sensitivity
polycarbonate plastics
protective layer
author_facet Conrad Rizal
author_sort Conrad Rizal
title Magneto-Optic Surface Plasmon Resonance Ti/Au/Co/Au/Pc Configuration and Sensitivity
title_short Magneto-Optic Surface Plasmon Resonance Ti/Au/Co/Au/Pc Configuration and Sensitivity
title_full Magneto-Optic Surface Plasmon Resonance Ti/Au/Co/Au/Pc Configuration and Sensitivity
title_fullStr Magneto-Optic Surface Plasmon Resonance Ti/Au/Co/Au/Pc Configuration and Sensitivity
title_full_unstemmed Magneto-Optic Surface Plasmon Resonance Ti/Au/Co/Au/Pc Configuration and Sensitivity
title_sort magneto-optic surface plasmon resonance ti/au/co/au/pc configuration and sensitivity
publisher MDPI AG
series Magnetochemistry
issn 2312-7481
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Magneto-optic surface plasmon resonance (MOSPR)-based sensors are highly attractive as next-generation biosensors. However, these sensors suffer from oxidation leading to degradation of performance, reproducibility of the sensor surface, because of the difficulty of removing adsorbed materials, and degradation of the sensor surface during surface cleaning and these limit their applications. In this paper, I propose MOSPR-based biosensors with 0 to 15 nm thick inert polycarbonate laminate plastic as a protective layer and theoretically demonstrate the practicability of my approach in water-medium for three different probing samples: ethanol, propanol, and pentanol. I also investigate microstructure and magnetic properties. The chemical composition and layered information of the sensor are investigated using X-ray reflectivity and X-ray diffraction analyses and these show distinct face-centered-cubic (fcc)-Au (111) phases, as dominated by the higher density of conduction electrons in Au as compared to Co. The magnetic characterization measured with the in-plane magnetic field to the sensor surface for both the as-deposited and annealed multilayers showed isotropic easy axis magnetization parallel to the multilayer interface at a saturating magnetic field of <100 Oersted (Oe). The sensor showed a maximum sensitivity of 5.5 × 104%/RIU (refractive index unit) for water–ethanol media and the highest detection level of 2.5 × 10−6 for water-pentanol media as the protective layer is increased from 0 to 15 nm.
topic Ti/Au/Co/Au
X-ray diffraction
SPR
MOSPR
sensitivity
polycarbonate plastics
protective layer
url http://www.mdpi.com/2312-7481/4/3/35
work_keys_str_mv AT conradrizal magnetoopticsurfaceplasmonresonancetiaucoaupcconfigurationandsensitivity
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