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Journal article ยท Preprint article

Liquid-infiltrated photonic crystals: enhanced light-matter interactions for lab-on-a-chip applications

From

Optofluidics Theory and Similation, Department of Micro- and Nanotechnology, Technical University of Denmark1

Department of Micro- and Nanotechnology, Technical University of Denmark2

Optical techniques are finding widespread use in analytical chemistry for chemical and bio-chemical analysis. During the past decade, there has been an increasing emphasis on miniaturization of chemical analysis systems and naturally this has stimulated a large effort in integrating microfluidics and optics in lab-on-a-chip microsystems.

This development is partly defining the emerging field of optofluidics. Scaling analysis and experiments have demonstrated the advantage of micro-scale devices over their macroscopic counterparts for a number of chemical applications. However, from an optical point of view, miniaturized devices suffer dramatically from the reduced optical path compared to macroscale experiments, e.g. in a cuvette.

Obviously, the reduced optical path complicates the application of optical techniques in lab-on-a-chip systems. In this paper we theoretically discuss how a strongly dispersive photonic crystal environment may be used to enhance the light-matter interactions, thus potentially compensating for the reduced optical path in lab-on-a-chip systems.

Combining electromagnetic perturbation theory with full-wave electromagnetic simulations we address the prospects for achieving slow-light enhancement of Beer-Lambert-Bouguer absorption, photonic band-gap based refractometry, and high-Q cavity sensing.

Language: English
Publisher: Springer-Verlag
Year: 2008
Pages: 117-127
ISSN: 16134990 and 16134982
Types: Journal article and Preprint article
DOI: 10.1007/s10404-007-0203-2
ORCIDs: Mortensen, Niels Asger and Xiao, Sanshui

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