Abstract

On-chip silicon microcavity sensors are advantageous for the detection of virus and biomolecules due to their compactness and the enhanced light-matter interaction with the analyte. While their theoretical sensitivity is at the single-molecule level, the fabrication of high quality (Q) factor silicon cavities and their integration with optical couplers remain as major hurdles in applications such as single virus detection. Here, label-free single virus detection using silicon photonic crystal random cavities is proposed and demonstrated. The sensor chips consist of free-standing silicon photonic crystal waveguides and do not require pre-fabricated defect cavities or optical couplers. Residual fabrication disorder results in Anderson-localized cavity modes which are excited by a free space beam. The Q≈105 is sufficient for observing discrete step-changes in resonance wavelength for the binding of single adenoviruses (≈50nm radius). The authors' findings point to future applications of CMOS-compatible silicon sensor chips supporting Anderson-localized modes that have detection capabilities at the level of single nanoparticles and molecules.

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