Standoff Mechanical Resonance Spectroscopy Based on
Infrared-Sensitive Hydrogel Microcantilevers
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Version 2 2016-09-22, 15:04Version 2 2016-09-22, 15:04
Version 1 2016-09-21, 13:37Version 1 2016-09-21, 13:37
Posted on 2016-09-06 - 00:00
This
paper reports a highly sensitive and selective remote chemical
sensing platform for surface-adsorbed trace chemicals by using infrared
(IR)-sensitive hydrogel microcantilevers. Poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate
(PEG-DA) hydrogel microcantilevers are fabricated by ultraviolet (UV)
curing of PEG-DA prepolymer introduced into a poly(dimethylsiloxane)
mold. The resonance frequency of a PEG-DA microcantilever exhibits
high thermal sensitivity due to IR irradiation/absorption. When a
tunable IR laser beam is reflected off a surface coated with target
chemical onto a PEG-DA microcantilever, the resonance frequency of
the cantilever shifts in proportion to the chemical nature of the
target molecules. Dynamic responses of the PEG-DA microcantilever
can be obtained in a range of IR wavelengths using a tunable quantum
cascade laser that can form the basis for the standoff mechanical
resonance spectroscopy (SMRS). Using this SMRS technique, we have
selectively detected three compounds, dimethyl methyl phosphonate
(DMMP), cyclotrimethylene trinitramine (RDX), and pentaerythritol
tetranitrate (PETN), located 4 m away from the PEG-DA microcantilever
detector. The experimentally measured limit of detection for PETN
trace using the PEG-DA microcantilever was 40 ng/cm2. Overall,
the PEG-DA microcantilever is a promising candidate for further exploration
and optimization of standoff detection methods.
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Chae, Inseok; Khan, M. Faheem; Song, Jungki; Kang, Taewook; Lee, Jungchul; Thundat, Thomas (2016). Standoff Mechanical Resonance Spectroscopy Based on
Infrared-Sensitive Hydrogel Microcantilevers. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.6b02540