Abstract

Bioinspired peptide waveguides of mesoscopic length scales have established a new paradigm in photonics with possible applications in precision bioimaging, sensing, and diagnostics. Here, we improve the efficiency of coupling various constituent colors of a white light source into single self-assembled microtube-shaped passive peptide waveguides by employing chromatic aberration. Thus, we use a chromatically aberrated microscope objective lens to couple light into peptide waveguides. Using both numerical simulation and experiments, we show that the waveguide response displays higher quality factor, wavelength selectivity, and axial coupling range compared to a chromatically corrected standard plan-fluoritic objective lens. We also demonstrate absorption and refractive index-based sensing by studying the changes in the optical responses of the peptide tubes in the presence of a wide concentration range of the absorptive Congo red, and the nonabsorptive Coumarin dyes. The former understandably display a much higher response than the latter due to the low finesse of the waveguides. We obtain a detection limit of around 10nM for Congo red, and 10 mM for Coumarin. Our study opens up possibilities for deploying such peptide microtubes for various biosensing applications utilizing spectral and waveguide characteristics.

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