Publication | Open Access
A Simple Small Size and Low Cost Sensor Based on Surface Plasmon Resonance for Selective Detection of Fe(III)
54
Citations
21
References
2014
Year
Pof SensorPhotonic SensorOptical MaterialsEngineeringLow Cost SensorChemistryChemical EngineeringMagnetoplasmonicsBiosensing SystemsOptical SensorBioimagingNanosensorSimple Small SizeCation SensingChemical SensorNanophotonicsOptical FiberNanotechnologySurface Plasmon ResonanceOptical SensorsPlasmonicsSensorsBiomedical DiagnosticsNatural SciencesSurface ScienceApplied PhysicsSensor DesignNanofabricationPlastic Optical FiberFunctional Materials
A simple, small size, and low cost sensor based on a Deferoxamine Self Assembled Monolayer (DFO-SAM) and Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) transduction, in connection with a Plastic Optical Fiber (POF), has been developed for the selective detection of Fe(III). DFO-SAM sensors based on appropriate electrochemical techniques can be frequently found in the scientific literature. In this work, we present the first example of a DFO-SAM sensor based on SPR in an optical fiber. The SPR sensing platform was realized by removing the cladding of a plastic optical fiber along half the circumference, spin coating a buffer of Microposit S1813 photoresist on the exposed core, and finally sputtering a thin gold film. The hydroxamate siderophore deferoxamine (DFO), having high binding affinity for Fe(III), is then used in its immobilized form, as self-assembled monolayer on the gold layer surface of the POF sensor. The results showed that the DFO-SAM-POF-sensor was able to sense the formation of the Fe(III)/DFO complex in the range of concentrations between 1 μm and 50 μm with a linearity range from 0 to 30 μm of Fe(III). The selectivity of the sensor was also proved by interference tests.
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