Medical Sensors Improve With Holey Gold Nanostructures
Sep. 26, 2013 — A new method
that fabricates gold nanostructures quickly and efficiently could lead
to highly sensitive, portable medical sensorsRecent advances in
nanotechnology are providing new possibilities for medical imaging and
sensing. Gold nanostructures, for example, can enhance the fluorescence
of marker dyes that are commonly used to detect biomolecules and
diagnose specific diseases.
Localized
surface plasmon resonance (bright areas) around a gold nanohole enhances
the fluorescence of a biomarker dye (Y-shaped molecule) when a specific
molecule of interest (purple circle) is present. (Credit: A*STAR
Institute of High Performance Computing)
Now, Ping Bai at the A*STAR Institute of High Performance Computing,
Singapore, and co-workers have developed a fast and inexpensive way to
fabricate arrays of gold nanoholes. The researchers have shown that
sensor chips built using these nanostructures can accurately detect
cancer-related molecules in blood and are small enough to be used in
portable medical devices.
Nanohole arrays are designed so that incident light of certain
wavelengths will induce large-scale oscillations of the gold electrons,
known as localized surface plasmon resonance (SPR). The localized SPR
focuses the absorbed light energy to enhance fluorescence (see image).
"Commercial SPR systems are already used in hospital laboratories,
but they are bulky and expensive," says Bai. "We would like to develop
small, handheld devices for on-the-spot clinical use. This requires
localized SPR, for which we need nanohole arrays."
Previously, nanohole arrays have been created using electron-beam
lithography (EBL), which is expensive and time consuming. Bai and
co-workers used EBL to create a nickel mold and then used the mold to
print nanohole patterns onto a photoresist material. The researchers
made the nanostructures by evaporating gold onto the patterned structure
before peeling off the photoresist material. Because the nickel mold
can be reused many times, this method -- called nano-imprinting -- can
produce large numbers of gold nanohole arrays.
"We fabricated arrays of 140 nanometer-square nanoholes with very few
defects," says Bai. As a first demonstration, the researchers showed
that a sensor chip made with their nanohole arrays could detect prostate
cancer antigens in blood, and was ten times more sensitive than an
identical device that used a gold film without nanoholes. Optimizing the
chip design would further improve the sensitivity, Bai notes.
The team believes that these chips could be incorporated into cheap
and portable point-of-care devices for rapid diagnosis of diseases such
as dengue fever. "The microfluidic cartridge built using our nanohole
arrays is about the size of a credit card," says Bai. "In the future, we
hope to build detectors that use very simple light sources, such as
LEDs, and simple detectors similar to smartphone cameras. These devices
will have widespread applications across medical science and could even
be used to detect contaminants in food, water or the air."
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