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On-Chip Volume Refractometry and Optical Binding of Nanoplastics Colloids in a Stable Optofluidic Fabry–Pérot Microresonator
Summary
Researchers developed a miniaturized on-chip sensor using a Fabry-Perot microresonator to detect and analyze nanoplastic particles in liquid samples. The device uses changes in light refraction to measure the concentration of nanoplastic colloids and can even optically trap particles for closer study. This approach offers a potential lab-on-a-chip tool for rapid, sensitive detection of nanoplastics in environmental samples.
Plastic pollution raises concerns for health and the environment. Plastics are not biodegradable but gradually erode to microplastic and nanoplastic particles spreading almost everywhere. Nanoplastics exhibit colloidal behavior. Thereby, their analysis can be accomplished by refractometry, preferably by an on-chip tool. We present a study of such colloids using a microfabricated Fabry–Pérot cavity with curved mirrors, which holds a capillary micro-tube used both for fluid handling and light collimation, resulting in an optically stable microresonator. Despite the numerous scatterers within the sample, the sub-millimeter scale cavity provides the advantages of reduced interaction length while maintaining light confinement. This significantly reduces optical loss and hence keeps resonance modes with quality factors (resonant frequency/bandwidth) above 1100. Therefore, small quantities of colloids can be measured by the interference spectral response through the shift in resonant wavelengths. The particles’ Brownian motion potentially causing perturbations in the spectra can be overcome either by post-measurement cross-correlation analysis or by avoiding it entirely by taking the measurements at once by a wideband source and a spectrum analyzer. The effective refractive index of solutions with solid contents down to 0.34% could be determined with good agreement with theoretical predictions. Even lower detection capabilities might be attained by slightly altering the technique to cause particle aggregation achieved solely by light.
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