Detecting Antibody–Antigen Interactions with Chiral Plasmons: Factors Influencing Chiral Plasmonic Sensing

January 18, 2022

Title

Detecting Antibody–Antigen Interactions with Chiral Plasmons: Factors Influencing Chiral Plasmonic Sensing

Author

Dominic J.P. Koyroytsaltis-McQuire, Cameron Gilroy, Laurence D. Barron, Nikolaj Gadegaard, Affar S. Karimullah, Malcolm Kadodwala

Year

2021

Journal

ADVANCED PHOTONICS RESEARCH

Abstract

Chiral near fields possessing enhanced asymmetry (superchirality), created by the interaction of light with (chiral) nanostructures, potentially provide a route to novel sensing and metrology technologies for biophysical applications. However, the mechanisms by which these near fields lead to the detection of chiral media is still poorly understood. Using a combination of numerical modeling and experimental measurements on an antibody–antigen exemplar system, important factors that influence the efficacy of chiral sensing are illustrated. It is demonstrated that localized and lattice chiral resonances display enantiomeric sensitivity. However, only the localized resonances show a strong dependency on the structure of the chiral media detected. This can be attributed to the ability of birefringent chiral layers to strongly modify the properties of near fields by acting as a sink/source of optical chirality, and hence alter inductive coupling between nanostructure elements. In addition, it is highlighted that surface morphology/defects may amplify sensing capabilities of localized chiral plasmonic modes by mediating inductive coupling.

Instrument

J-810

Keywords

chiral, nanostructure, enantiomeric sensitivity