Plasmonic Layer as a Localized Temperature Control Element for Surface Plasmonic Resonance-Based Sensors
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Design and Fabrication of a Multichannel SPR Sensor
2.1. Design and Fabrication
2.2. Characterization of the Electrical Properties of the Plasmonic Layer
3. Modeling of the Sensor Behavior
3.1. Temperature
3.1.1. COMSOL Modeling
- It consolidates our original goal having independent control of each channel;
- It allows us to narrow the modeling window (white delimitation in Figure 5), and thus, considerably decrease the calculation time.
3.1.2. Inclusion of Experimental Conditions into the Modeling
Thermal Camera Measurements
SPR Measurements
3.2. SPR Model
3.2.1. Current Injection
3.2.2. Temperature
- -
- temperature of water has been set to 67 °C (curve “previous + water @ 67 °C” in Figure 11);
- -
- value of H-ZF1 refractive index @67 °C is inserted (curve “previous + H-ZF1 (refractive index) @ 67 °C” in Figure 11);
- -
- value of metal refractive index @67 °C is added (curve “previous + metal (refractive index) @ 67 °C” in Figure 11);
- -
- thermal expansion of metal films is inserted (curve “previous + metal thermal expansion: all contributions @ 67 °C” in Figure 11).
4. Characterization of Thermal Behavior
4.1. Measurement Set-Up
- This holder is maintained at 60 °C. The number of emitted photons for 1° temperature rise is then higher at a base temperature of 60 °C than at 20 °C since it increases as a cubic function with absolute temperature [45].
- A 50-µm thick adhesive polyimide film (Kapton) is placed onto the sensor to enhance emissivity. The evaporated gold thin films, which can be considered as polished gold, have a low emissivity coefficient value; a commonly agreed value is between 0.01 and 0.02, while the value of Kapton is between 0.75 and 0.85 [46]. The difference can be clearly observed in Figure 13, where the left part of the channel has been covered by a Kapton film and the right part is a nude gold surface: no detectable signal is discerned from the uncoated part of the channel.
4.2. Thermal Measurements
5. Thermal Measurements on SPR Experiment
- -
- temperature rise can cross over the 1-mm thickness of sensor. In Figure 15 and for high current injection levels, it can be seen that lateral spreading of the temperature rise is not negligible, up to a couple tens of degrees, at 1 mm away from the channel edge. In a first approach, we can consider that this spreading is isotropic within the glass substrate and that such a temperature rise can be obtained on its bottom side. Such a temperature rise can then affect the matching index fluid that is used between sensor and prism. Its temperature increase will modify its refractive index and can, thus, modify the beam injection angle;
- -
- the heat transfer can increase, decreasing the temperature in the channel. This could be linked to the phenomenon that is observed, for an air environment, in Figure 15 for high current injection, where the experimental temperature profile outside the channel does not follow the theoretical one. This hypothesis has not been investigated yet, and it might be especially important for a fluid environment.
6. Conclusions
- an inherently localized temperature control;
- a versatile approach: the design of the channels can be matched to any implementation constraint. Calibration of the heating system will, nevertheless, be dependent on the design;
- a quick temperature control: a response time of a few seconds has been measured;
- a low-cost solution controlling the temperature, since no particular external system is needed.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Glass | Gold | Unit | |
---|---|---|---|
Density (ρ) | 2730 | 17,000 | kg/m3 |
Thermal conductivity (κ) | 0.85 | 300 | W/(m.K) |
Heat capacity (Cp) | 730 | 128.8 | J/(Kg.K) |
Electrical conductivity (σ) | From measurement (see Section 2.2) | S/m |
Parameters Inserted in the Modeling | Minimum Position (nm) | Variation of Minimum Position Versus Reference Case (nm) | Relative Variation (nm) |
---|---|---|---|
Reference (all the system is at 20 °C) but current is injected | 769.23 | - | - |
Added: refractive index of water @ 67 °C | 738.57 | −30.66 | - |
Added: refractive index of H-ZF1@ 67 °C | 738.74 | −30.49 | +0.17 |
Added: refractive index of metals @ 67 °C | 743.11 | −26.12 | +4.37 |
Added: metal thermal expansion @ 67 °C (All contributions) | 742.95 | −26.28 | −0.16 |
Current (mA) | Temperature Rise (°C) | Absolute Temperature (°C) | Water Refractive index (RIU) [43] | ΔRI (10−3 RIU) (Versus Reference at 20 °C) |
---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | 20 | 1.326440 | 0.000 |
100 | 1.74 | 21.74 | 1.326290 | −0.149 |
150 | 7.00 | 27.00 | 1.325783 | −0.657 |
200 | 15.95 | 35.95 | 1.324732 | −1.707 |
250 | 27.64 | 47.64 | 1.323039 | −3.401 |
300 | 41.84 | 61.84 | 1.320557 | −5.883 |
350 | 59.05 | 79.05 | 1.317045 | −9.395 |
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Ganesan, S.; Maricot, S.; Robillard, J.-F.; Okada, E.; Bakouche, M.-T.; Hay, L.; Vilcot, J.-P. Plasmonic Layer as a Localized Temperature Control Element for Surface Plasmonic Resonance-Based Sensors. Sensors 2021, 21, 2035. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21062035
Ganesan S, Maricot S, Robillard J-F, Okada E, Bakouche M-T, Hay L, Vilcot J-P. Plasmonic Layer as a Localized Temperature Control Element for Surface Plasmonic Resonance-Based Sensors. Sensors. 2021; 21(6):2035. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21062035
Chicago/Turabian StyleGanesan, Sivaramakrishnan, Sophie Maricot, Jean-Francois Robillard, Etienne Okada, Mohamed-Taieb Bakouche, Laurent Hay, and Jean-Pierre Vilcot. 2021. "Plasmonic Layer as a Localized Temperature Control Element for Surface Plasmonic Resonance-Based Sensors" Sensors 21, no. 6: 2035. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21062035
APA StyleGanesan, S., Maricot, S., Robillard, J. -F., Okada, E., Bakouche, M. -T., Hay, L., & Vilcot, J. -P. (2021). Plasmonic Layer as a Localized Temperature Control Element for Surface Plasmonic Resonance-Based Sensors. Sensors, 21(6), 2035. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21062035