8 January 2022 Experimental detection of Immunoglobulin G by prism-coupled angular interrogation and a support vector machine
Patrick D. McAtee, Akhlesh Lakhtakia
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

A typical prism-coupled surface-plasmon-resonance biosensor comprises a metal thin film in contact with a solution containing an analyte to be sensed. The metal film also acts as a binding surface for bioreceptor molecules to capture and concentrate the analyte molecules of interest. We investigated the use of a porous, anisotropic, periodically non-homogeneous material called a chiral sculptured thin film (CSTF) grown on top of the metal film to confine the solution in its pores. The efficacy of a basic plasmonic sensor was compared with those of two types of sensors containing a CSTF, one type having a metal-nanoparticle layer at a distance of one period from the metal film and the other without that layer. The chosen analyte was Immunoglobulin G and the chosen bioreceptor was Protein A. Measurements were made over a wide angular range rather than over a small range tied to the excitation of a surface-plasmon-polariton wave, and the collected data were used to train a machine-learning algorithm called a support vector machine for classification. We concluded that the metal/CSTF sensor with a metal-nanoparticle layer performs best, the metal-nanoparticle layer being crucial to its better performance.

© 2022 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) 1934-2608/2022/$28.00 © 2022 SPIE
Patrick D. McAtee and Akhlesh Lakhtakia "Experimental detection of Immunoglobulin G by prism-coupled angular interrogation and a support vector machine," Journal of Nanophotonics 16(1), 016003 (8 January 2022). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JNP.16.016003
Received: 1 October 2021; Accepted: 10 December 2021; Published: 8 January 2022
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Gold

Metals

Video

Biological research

Prisms

Proteins

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