Enhanced Optical Biosensing by Aerotaxy Ga(As)P Nanowire Platforms Suitable for Scalable Production

Julia Valderas-Gutiérrez, Rubina Davtyan, Sudhakar Sivakumar, Nicklas Anttu, Yuyu Li, Patrick Flatt, Jae Yen Shin, Christelle N. Prinz, Fredrik Höök, Thoas Fioretos, Martin H. Magnusson, Heiner Linke*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)
20 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Sensitive detection of low-abundance biomolecules is central for diagnostic applications. Semiconductor nanowires can be designed to enhance the fluorescence signal from surface-bound molecules, prospectively improving the limit of optical detection. However, to achieve the desired control of physical dimensions and material properties, one currently uses relatively expensive substrates and slow epitaxy techniques. An alternative approach is aerotaxy, a high-throughput and substrate-free production technique for high-quality semiconductor nanowires. Here, we compare the optical sensing performance of custom-grown aerotaxy-produced Ga(As)P nanowires vertically aligned on a polymer substrate to GaP nanowires batch-produced by epitaxy on GaP substrates. We find that signal enhancement by individual aerotaxy nanowires is comparable to that from epitaxy nanowires and present evidence of single-molecule detection. Platforms based on both types of nanowires show substantially higher normalized-to-blank signal intensity than planar glass surfaces, with the epitaxy platforms performing somewhat better, owing to a higher density of nanowires. With further optimization, aerotaxy nanowires thus offer a pathway to scalable, low-cost production of highly sensitive nanowire-based platforms for optical biosensing applications.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)9063–9071
JournalACS Applied Nano Materials
Volume5
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 Jul 2022
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Enhanced Optical Biosensing by Aerotaxy Ga(As)P Nanowire Platforms Suitable for Scalable Production'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this