4.8 Article

Ultrasensitive Transmissive Infrared Spectroscopy via Loss Engineering of Metallic Nanoantennas for Compact Devices

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 11, Issue 50, Pages 47270-47278

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b18002

Keywords

nanoantennas; infrared spectroscopy; metamaterials; mid-infrared; coupled-mode theory

Funding

  1. NRF CRP at the National University of Singapore, Singapore [R-263-000C24-281]
  2. NRF-ISF at the National University of Singapore, Singapore [R-263-000-C64-281]

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Miniaturized infrared spectroscopy is highly desired for widespread applications, including environment monitoring, chemical analysis, and biosensing. Nanoantennas, as a promising approach, feature strong field enhancement and provide opportunities for ultrasensitive molecule detection even in the nanoscale range. However, current efforts for higher sensitivities by nanogaps usually suffer a trade-off between the performance and fabrication cost. Here, novel crooked nanoantennas are designed with a different paradigm based on loss engineering to overcome the above bottleneck. Compared to the commonly used straight nanoantennas, the crooked nanoantennas feature higher sensitivity and a better fabrication tolerance. Molecule signals are increased by 25 times, reaching an experimental enhancement factor of 2.8 x 10(4). The optimized structure enables a transmissive CO2 sensor with sensitivities up to 0.067% ppm(-1). More importantly, such a performance is achieved without sub-100 nm structures, which are common in previous works, enabling compatibility with commercial optical lithography. The mechanism of our design can be explained by the interplay of radiative and absorptive losses of nanoantennas that obeys the coupled-mode theory. Leveraging the advantage of the transmission mode in an optical system, our work paves the way toward cheap, compact, and ultrasensitive infrared spectroscopy.

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