Materials Perspectives of Integrated Plasmonic Biosensors

Materials (Basel). 2022 Oct 18;15(20):7289. doi: 10.3390/ma15207289.

Abstract

With the growing need for portable, compact, low-cost, and efficient biosensors, plasmonic materials hold the promise to meet this need owing to their label-free sensitivity and deep light-matter interaction that can go beyond the diffraction limit of light. In this review, we shed light on the main physical aspects of plasmonic interactions, highlight mainstream and future plasmonic materials including their merits and shortcomings, describe the backbone substrates for building plasmonic biosensors, and conclude with a brief discussion of the factors affecting plasmonic biosensing mechanisms. To do so, we first observe that 2D materials such as graphene and transition metal dichalcogenides play a major role in enhancing the sensitivity of nanoparticle-based plasmonic biosensors. Then, we identify that titanium nitride is a promising candidate for integrated applications with performance comparable to that of gold. Our study highlights the emerging role of polymer substrates in the design of future wearable and point-of-care devices. Finally, we summarize some technical and economic challenges that should be addressed for the mass adoption of plasmonic biosensors. We believe this review will be a guide in advancing the implementation of plasmonics-based integrated biosensors.

Keywords: 2D nanomaterials; LSPR; SPR; TMD; graphene; plasmon resonance; plasmonic biosensing; plasmonic materials; plasmonics; point-of-care devices; substrates.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This research is supported by Discovery Grants from the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (RGPIN-6758-2018, GPIN-2020-06053), Canadian Mathematics of Information Technology and Complex Systems Agency (MITACS IT21953), CMC Microsystems, an infrastructure grants from the Canada Foundation for Innovation, an Ontario Research Fund for Research Excellence Funding Grant, and a start-up grant from McMaster University.