Title: Optical Chemical Sensor Systems
1Optical Chemical Sensor Systems based on
Photosensitive Hybrid Sol-Gel Glass B.D.
MacCraith, S. Aubonnet, H. Barry, C. von
Bültzingslöwen, J.-M. Sabattié, C.S.
Burke Optical Sensors Laboratory - National
Centre for Sensor Research Dublin City University
- Ireland
- 5 Sensor Configurations
- Photosensitive sol-gel glass can be used to
produce a range of useful sensing configurations,
e.g. integrated optic structures and arrays of
sensor spots
Photopatterned array of doped sensor spots
Average ridge thickness of 14.5?m
The fluorescence is captured in each waveguide
and can be observed at the channel output.
- 6 Microsystems (Lab-on-a-chip)
- Major developments in miniaturised sensor systems
with high levels of integration and
functionality, e.g. ?-TAS (micro-total-analysis
systems) - Key ?-TAS elements include microfluidic channels
and patterned surfaces - UV-photolithographic sol-gel materials can be
used for rapid prototyping, templating of PDMS
(poly-dimethyl siloxane), and patterning of
surfaces.
- 7 Conclusions
- UV-curable sol-gel materials combine the
versatility of the sol-gel process with the
capabilities of photolithography. - Tunable doped sensor materials, waveguide sensor
structures and sensor arrays can be fabricated
with this process. - Future work micro-optical sensor chips and
multi- analyte sensor systems
Silicon substrate
UV-cured sol-gel ridges (50 mm width)
PDMS drop
PDMS micro channels