Nanoimprinting on optical fiber end faces for chemical sensing

  • Kostovski G
  • White D
  • Mitchell A
  • et al.
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Abstract

Optical fiber surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) sensors offer a potential solution to monitoring low chemical concentrations in-situ or in remote sensing scenarios. We demonstrate the use of nanoimprint lithography to fabricate SERS-compatible nanoarrays on the end faces of standard silica optical fibers. The antireflective nanostructure found on cicada wings was used as a convenient template for the nanoarray, as high sensitivity SERS substrates have previously been demonstrated on these surfaces. Coating the high fidelity replicas with silver creates a dense array of regular nanoscale plasmonic resonators. A monolayer of thiophenol was used as a low concentration analyte, from which strong Raman spectra were collected using both direct endface illumination and through-fiber interrogation. This unique combination of nanoscale replication with optical fibers demonstrates a high-resolution, low-cost approach to fabricating high-performance optical fiber chemical sensors.

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APA

Kostovski, G., White, D. J., Mitchell, A., Austin, M. W., & Stoddart, P. R. (2008). Nanoimprinting on optical fiber end faces for chemical sensing. In 19th International Conference on Optical Fibre Sensors (Vol. 7004, p. 70042H). SPIE. https://doi.org/10.1117/12.785975

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