Abstract

U or C-shaped waveguides, coupled to analyte microchannels, have been shown to be very responsive to evanescent-wave-absorption-based sensing. However, due to only having a single C-bend length, for analyte interaction in earlier devices, there was always an opportunity to advance their evanescent-absorbance sensitivity, by including multiple C-bend structures (interfaced with the analyte microchannel system) in the device design. To achieve this objective, two different types of waveguide probes (having a different orientation of two C-bends), i.e. S-bend and spiral-bend, were theoretically analyzed and further, experimentally tested for their comparative sensitivity to evanescent wave absorption, in this pioneering study. A novel single-step fabrication procedure (using an SU-8 photoresist), was executed to fabricate these waveguide structures interfaced (both at their inner and outer bend surfaces) with a microchannel system, along with fiber-to-waveguide coupler structures. Experimentally, the sensitivity of the S-bend waveguides was found to be ∼25% higher compared to that of spiral waveguides of similar dimensions, which corroborated the results from numerical modeling. Compared to our earlier embedded C-bend waveguides, the overall evanescent-wave-absorption-based detection sensitivity of the embedded spiral and S-bend waveguides were found to be improved by ∼7.5 times and ∼9 times respectively. Finally, these devices were found to be ideally suited for more sensitive biological-, as well as, chemical-sensing applications, provided a suitable surface alteration process is performed to these waveguide probes. Further, the proposed device has a possible capability for: facile continuous (real-time) analysis, a fixed sample volume interaction, and control over the evaporation of analyte samples introduced in to the device.

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