Publication | Closed Access
Trace explosive detection using photothermal deflection spectroscopy
92
Citations
25
References
2008
Year
NanosensorsEngineeringFire DetectionChemistrySensor TechnologyBioimagingPoor SelectivityInstrumentationNanosensorChemical SensorMaterials ScienceTrace Explosive DetectionHigh SensitivityInfrared SpectroscopyPhotonic MaterialsHigh SelectivityOptical SensorsBiomedical DiagnosticsNanomaterialsSpectroscopyExplosive ChemistryApplied PhysicsMaterials CharacterizationNatural SciencesSensor DesignBomb Damage Assessment
Satisfying the conditions of high sensitivity and high selectivity using portable sensors that are also reversible is a challenge. Miniature sensors such as microcantilevers offer high sensitivity but suffer from poor selectivity due to the lack of sufficiently selective receptors. Although many of the mass deployable spectroscopic techniques provide high selectivity, they do not have high sensitivity. Here, we show that this challenge can be overcome by combining photothermal spectroscopy on a bimaterial microcantilever with the mass induced change in the cantilever’s resonance frequency. Detection using adsorption-induced resonant frequency shift together with photothermal deflection spectroscopy shows extremely high selectivity with a subnanogram limit of detection for vapor phase adsorbed explosives, such as pentaerythritol tetranitrate (PETN), cyclotrimethylene trinitramine (RDX), and trinitrotoluene (TNT).
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