A conventional surface plasmon resonance (SPR) measurement system typically includes one or more light emitting diodes (LEDs) that illuminate a target. LEDs have a coherence length that is sufficiently long to enable an SPR measurement system to detect small shifts in SPR resonances, which can provide for high accuracy and high sensitivity for the SPR measurement system. LEDs also have the advantage of being inexpensive. However, light that is provided by an LED is not highly directional and typically has low power. These properties of the LED can reduce the amount of light that is incident on the target and can reduce signal-to-noise (SNR) ratio, which can correspondingly reduce accuracy and sensitivity of the SPR measurement system.
A super-luminescent light emitting diode (SLED) has many of the performance benefits of a conventional LED, but the SLED has higher power and provides more directional light than a conventional LED. However, SLEDs are presently substantially more expensive than conventional LEDs.
Lasers can provide high power light that is highly directional, at a cost that is typically lower than that of a SLED. A conventional laser also has a coherence length that is sufficiently long to provide the SPR measurement system with enough measurement resolution to detect small shifts in SPR resonances. However, the coherence length of a conventional laser can be long enough to produce interference effects that reduce the accuracy and measurement repeatability of an SPR measurement system.
Accordingly, there is need for a light source that has the low cost, high power and high directionality features of a conventional laser, without the interference effects that result from the long coherence length of the conventional laser.
According to an alternative embodiment of the present invention, the measurement system 10 includes the components of a reflectometric interference spectroscopy (RIfS) measurement system, wherein the target 14 includes a RIfS sensor. An example of a RIfS measurement system and a RIfS sensor is disclosed in Quantification of Quaternary Mixtures of Alcohols: a comparison of reflectometric interference spectroscopy and surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy, by Maura Kasper, Stefan Busche, Frank Dieterle, Georg Beige and Gunter Gauglitz, Institute of Physics Publishing, Measurement Science and Technology, 15, (2004), pages 540-548.
According to alternative embodiments of the present invention, the measurement system 10 includes the components of a coupled plasmon-waveguide resonance (CPWR) measurement system, wherein the target 14 includes a CPWR sensor. An example of a CPWR measurement system and a CPWR sensor is disclosed in Optical Anisotropy in Lipid Bilayer Membranes; Coupled Plasmon-Waveguide Resonance Measurements of Molecular Orientation, Polarizability, and Shape, by Zdzislaw Salamon and Gordon Tollin, Biophysical Journal, Volume 80, March 2001, pages 1557-1567.
The SPR measurement system 17 (shown in
The modulated laser source 12 in the measurement system 10, according to embodiments of the present invention, typically includes a laser diode, a solid-state laser, a gas laser, a semiconductor laser with an external cavity, or any other type of laser with sufficiently high power and sufficiently directional light to illuminate the target 14 and provide a suitable signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for the measurement system 10. In one example, the modulated laser source 12 includes a Samsung model DL7140-201S laser diode that provides 80 mW of highly directional light that can be amplitude modulated to provide the modulated laser source 12.
A modulation signal 13 is applied to the modulated laser source 12 to provide an optical signal 15. The characteristics of the modulation signal 13 typically depend on the type of laser that is included in the modulated laser source 12. In an example shown in
In an example shown in
In an example shown in
In alternative examples, the modulation signal 13 provides for mode-locking, frequency-chirping, or a gain-switching of the laser that is included in the modulated laser source 12. Mode-locked lasers, and examples of the corresponding optical signals 15 provided by the mode-locked lasers, are disclosed in references, such as Optical Electronics, Fourth Edition, by Amnon Yariv, Saunders College Publishing, ISBN 0-03-047444-2, pages 190-200. Frequency-chirped lasers, gain-switched lasers, and examples of corresponding optical signals 15 provided by the lasers, are disclosed in references, such as Long-Wavelength Semiconductor Lasers, G. P. Agrawal and N. K. Dutta, Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, ISBN 0-442-20995-9, pages 263-281. In an alternative example, the modulated laser source 12 includes a passive mode-locked laser. The modulated laser source 12 can also include any other type of laser that can be amplitude and/or frequency modulated via the modulation signal 13 to reduce coherence length of the laser.
The modulated laser source 12 has an unmodulated state wherein the modulated laser source 12 is not modulated. In the unmodulated state, the optical signal that is provided has a first coherence length. The modulated laser source 12 has a modulated state wherein the modulation signal 13 is applied to the modulated laser source 12 to provide the optical signal 15. In the modulated state, the modulated laser source 12 has a second coherence length that is shorter than the first coherence length. In one example, the modulated laser source 12 includes a laser diode that has a coherence length of greater than ten meters in the unmodulated state, and a coherence length of less than two centimeters in the modulated state. The reduction in coherence length between the modulated state and the unmodulated state in this example is achieved via the modulation signal 13 applied to the modulated laser source 12 that includes a sinusoidal modulation current Imod1 with a peak-to-peak amplitude of 30 mA at a frequency of 690 MHz, superimposed on a drive signal Id1 of 40 mA DC.
Coherence length is typically defined as in Fiber Optic Test and Measurement, edited by Dennis Derickson, Prentice Hall PTR, ISBN 0-13-534330-5, pages 172-173, as the product of the coherence time of a laser source and the velocity of light, where the coherence time is defined as 1/(πΔν), where Δν is the full-width half-maximum (FWHM) of the optical signal 15. The coherence length can also have alternative definitions that depend on the characteristics of the modulation signal 13 and the resulting optical signal 15.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, attributes of the modulation signal 13 are established according to a method 50 shown in
An example of the method 50 is provided in the context of SPR measurements that are acquired by the measurement system 10. In an unmodulated state of the modulated laser source 12, the detected signal 19 provided by the measurement system 10 has a time-varying ripple on the detected signal 19, in addition to a desired signal component 29 of the detected signal 19.
In an SPR measurement, the time-varying ripple shown in
The reduction of coherence length provided in the modulated state of the modulated laser source 12 can substantially reduce, or even eliminate the drift component 31 that is attributable to interference effects of the measurement system 10. Step 52 of the method 50 can be applied to the measurement system 10 by adjusting the attributes of the modulation signal 13, such as the amplitude, waveform shape, or frequency while observing the detected signal 19 provided by the measurement system (step 54). By applying step 56 of the method 50, steps 52 and 54 can be repeated until the drift component 31 of the detected signal 19 is minimized or is satisfactorily small. Based on application of the method 50 to the measurement system 10, the attributes of the modulation signal 13 can be selected so that the modulated state of the modulated laser source 12 provides a reduction in the drift component 31 of the detected signal 19 that is sufficient to enable the signal component 29 of the detected signal 19 to adequately detect shifts in refractive indices of the target 14.
According to alternative embodiments of the present invention, the attributes of the modulation signal 13 are established based on the optical signal 15 that results at the output of the modulated laser source 12 in the modulated state. In one example, the amplitude and/or frequency of the modulation signal 13 applied to the modulated laser source 12 are varied until the optical signal 15 shifts from a continuous wave (CW) mode of operation (shown in an example in
While examples of alternative methods of establishing the attributes of the modulation signal 13 have been provided for the purpose of illustration, alternative embodiments of the present invention include modulation signals 13 that have attributes established according to any suitable method. The modulation signal 13 provides for amplitude and/or frequency modulation of the modulated laser source 12. The modulation signal 13 can also provide intensity modulation of the modulated laser source 12 due to the inherent relationship between amplitude and intensity of an optical signal 15.
The detector 16 included in the measurement system 10 intercepts the deflected signal 11 that is provided by the target 14, and provides a detected signal 19 in response to the intercepted signal 11. The detector 16 typically includes a silicon, germanium, or indium-gallium-arsenide photodiode, a camera module, or a photomultiplier tube. The detector 16 can also include any device, element, or array of devices or elements that provide one or more detected signals 19 in response to the deflected signal 11. The detector 16 typically includes a processor (not shown) that receives the detected signal 19 and processes the detected signal 19 to provide an output to a display or other output device. The processor enables the detected signal 19 to indicate relative intensity versus incidence angle Φ as shown in
The type of target 14 that is included in the measurement system 10 depends on the type of the measurement system 10. For example, in the measurement system 10 shown in
While the embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated in detail, it should be apparent that modifications and adaptations to these embodiments may occur to one skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the present invention as set forth in the following claims.