Optical biosensing of bacteria and cells using porous silicon based, photonic lamellar gratings
Published 2013 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Optical biosensing of bacteria and cells using porous silicon based, photonic lamellar gratings
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS
Volume 103, Issue 3, Pages 033702
Publisher
AIP Publishing
Online
2013-07-17
DOI
10.1063/1.4813740
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Anti resonant reflecting optical waveguide structure based on oxidized porous silicon for label free bio sensing applications
- (2012) L. Haji et al. APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS
- Towards a biosensor based on anti resonant reflecting optical waveguide fabricated from porous silicon
- (2012) M. Hiraoui et al. BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
- Porous silicon biosensor: Current status
- (2012) Saakshi Dhanekar et al. BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
- Rationally designed porous silicon as platform for optical biosensors
- (2012) G. Priano et al. THIN SOLID FILMS
- Peptides for the Biofunctionalization of Silicon for Use in Optical Sensing with Porous Silicon Microcavities
- (2011) Elias Estephan et al. ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
- Engineering Nanostructured Porous SiO2Surfaces for Bacteria Detection via “Direct Cell Capture”
- (2011) Naama Massad-Ivanir et al. ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
- A microfluidics assisted porous silicon array for optical label-free biochemical sensing
- (2011) Ilaria Rea et al. Biomicrofluidics
- Surface Functionalization of Nanostructured Porous Silicon by APTS: Toward the Fabrication of Electrical Biosensors of Bacterium Escherichia coli
- (2011) G. Recio-Sanchez et al. Current Nanoscience
- Nanostructured porous silicon–polymer-based hybrids: from biosensing to drug delivery
- (2011) Lisa M Bonanno et al. Nanomedicine
- Construction and Characterization of Porous SiO2/Hydrogel Hybrids as Optical Biosensors for Rapid Detection of Bacteria
- (2010) Naama Massad-Ivanir et al. ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
- Porous silicon structures for low-cost diffraction-based biosensing
- (2010) Judson D. Ryckman et al. APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS
- Bacteria Pattern Spontaneously on Periodic Nanostructure Arrays
- (2010) Allon I. Hochbaum et al. NANO LETTERS
- FTRIFS biosensor based on double layer porous silicon as a LC detector for target molecule screening from complex samples
- (2009) Yunling Shang et al. BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
- Real-time monitoring of enzyme activity in a mesoporous silicon double layer
- (2009) Manuel M. Orosco et al. Nature Nanotechnology
- Two- and three-dimensional composite photonic crystals of macroporous silicon and lead sulfide semiconductor nanostructures
- (2009) Nadav Gutman et al. PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI A-APPLICATIONS AND MATERIALS SCIENCE
- Porous silicon biosensors on the advance
- (2009) Andrew Jane et al. TRENDS IN BIOTECHNOLOGY
- Enhanced photoluminescence and photonic bandgap modification from composite photonic crystals of macroporous silicon and nanocrystalline PbS thin films
- (2008) N. Gutman et al. APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS
- The importance of surface chemistry in mesoporous materials: lessons from porous silicon biosensors
- (2008) Kristopher A. Kilian et al. CHEMICAL COMMUNICATIONS
- Label-free detection of biomolecular interactions in real time with a nano-porous silicon-based detection method
- (2008) Martin Latterich et al. Proteome Science
- Use of silica microspheres having refractive index similar to bacteria for conversion of flow cytometric forward light scatter into biovolume
- (2008) Paola Foladori et al. WATER RESEARCH
- Fabrication and chemical surface modification of mesoporous silicon for biomedical applications
- (2007) Jarno Salonen et al. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Become a Peeref-certified reviewer
The Peeref Institute provides free reviewer training that teaches the core competencies of the academic peer review process.
Get StartedAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started