The present application is a Section 111(a) application relating to and claiming the benefit of commonly owned, co-pending U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/977,452, having a filing date of Apr. 9, 2014, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
The present invention generally relates to optical fibers, and, more specifically, to nanostructured sapphire optical fibers (“NSOF”), an NSOF sensing platform, and methods for making NSOF and NSOF sensing platforms.
Optical fibers have made a significant impact on sensing technologies due to their intrinsic immunity to electromagnetic interference, electrical passivity, high resolution and large dynamic range. An important new class of optical fiber has recently emerged: microstructured optical fibers (“MOF”), which presents new alternatives for a multitude of scientific and technological applications by means of synergistically integrating optics and microfluidics in a single fiber with unprecedented light path length. However, existing fibers are all based on silica, which is inherently unstable in chemically harsh environments at high temperatures. As the demand for advanced systems increases in areas such as aerospace, sustainable energy, military security, and industrial processes, sensor technologies that can function under extreme operating conditions become of critical importance. Sapphire optical fibers offer an excellent alternative due to their known chemical and thermal stability, but microstructured versions cannot be readily made as in the case of silica MOF. Additionally, commercially available and optical-quality sapphire fibers rated for high temperatures are all free of cladding. Unclad sapphire fiber is extremely sensitive to attenuation due to scattering and absorption by particulate deposits and contaminants within a service environment. Further, the ˜1.77:1.0 index contrast between sapphire fiber and air in the visible range results in rapid decay of the evanescent field from a fiber surface to its surroundings, limiting the field-analyte overlap for sensing interrogation.
In an embodiment, a method for fabricating a sensor includes coating an end-polished sapphire fiber with aluminum to produce a sapphire fiber having an aluminum coating, anodizing the aluminum coating to produce an aluminum oxide coating, and removing the aluminum oxide coating from a distal end of the sapphire fiber. In an embodiment, the method also includes immobilizing a plurality of nanoparticles in pores of the porous aluminum oxide coating. In an embodiment, the plurality of nanoparticles includes one of a plurality of silver nanoparticles and a plurality of gold nanoparticles.
In an embodiment, the step of immobilizing the plurality of nanoparticles in pores of the porous aluminum oxide coating includes the steps of immersing the sapphire fiber with porous anodized aluminum oxide coating in a solution of polyallylamine hydrochloride, rinsing the porous aluminum oxide coating in purified water, and immersing the with porous aluminum oxide coating in a suspension of silver nanoparticles. In an embodiment, a concentration of the solution of polyallylamine hydrochloride is about 0.2 milligrams per milliliter. In an embodiment, the step of immobilizing the plurality of nanoparticles in pores of the porous aluminum oxide coating further includes adding a sodium citrate solution to a silver nitrate solution to produce a mixture and exposing the mixture to ultraviolet light for a predetermined time period to produce the solution of silver nanoparticles. In an embodiment, the sodium citrate solution includes 0.8 milliliter of 1% aqueous sodium citrate and the silver nitrate solution includes 40 milliliters of 1 millimolar AgNO3. In an embodiment, the predetermined time period is about four hours and the mixture is maintained at a temperature of less than 50 degrees Celsius during the exposing step.
In an embodiment, the step of immobilizing the plurality of nanoparticles in pores of the porous aluminum oxide coating includes the steps of immersing the porous aluminum oxide coating in a solution of tin chloride and hydrochloric acid thereby forming tin deposits in the porous aluminum oxide coating, immersing the porous aluminum oxide coating with the tin deposits in a solution of silver nitrate to produce silver seeds in the porous aluminum oxide coating, and immersing the porous aluminum oxide coating with the silver seeds in a solution of silver nitrate and ascorbic acid thereby forming silver nanoparticles in the porous anodized aluminum oxide coating. In an embodiment, the steps of immersing the porous aluminum oxide coating in a solution of tin chloride and hydrochloric acid and immersing the porous aluminum oxide coating with the tin deposits in a solution of silver nitrate constitute a deposition cycle. In an embodiment, the deposition cycle is repeated for a plurality of deposition cycles prior to immersing the porous anodized aluminum oxide coating with the silver seeds in a solution of silver nitrate and ascorbic acid. In an embodiment, the plurality of deposition cycles comprises five deposition cycles.
In an embodiment, the method also includes selecting a parameter of the anodizing step to control at least one of a size of pores in the porous anodized aluminum oxide coating, a depth of pores in the porous anodized aluminum oxide coating, and an interpore distance between pores in the porous anodized aluminum oxide coating. In an embodiment, the parameter includes one or both of a pH of an electrolyte solution used for the anodizing step and a voltage applied to an electrolyte solution used for the anodizing step.
In an embodiment, the step of coating the end-polished sapphire fiber includes dip-coating the end-polished sapphire fiber in liquid aluminum. In an embodiment, the dip-coating step is performed under an inert atmosphere. In an embodiment, the anodizing step is performed in an acidic electrolyte solution under an applied voltage. In an embodiment, the step of removing the distal end of the porous aluminum oxide coating includes dipping the distal end of the porous aluminum oxide coating in an acidic solution.
In an embodiment, a sensor includes an end-polished sapphire fiber, a porous aluminum oxide coating covering an outer surface of the end-polished sapphire fiber, and a plurality of nanoparticles immobilized in pores of the porous aluminum oxide coating. In an embodiment, the plurality of nanoparticles includes one of a plurality of silver nanoparticles and a plurality of gold nanoparticles.
For a more complete understanding of the present invention, reference is made to the following detailed description of the exemplary embodiments considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The exemplary embodiments of the present invention provide a platform for chemical sensing and measurements in harsh environments at high temperatures. An exemplary sensing platform includes sapphire optical fiber with a nanoporous anodized aluminum oxide (“AAO”) cladding. An exemplary fabrication method includes the steps of coating sapphire fiber with a metallic aluminum coating, then electrochemically converting the aluminum metal to nanoporous AAO. The resultant NSOF/AAO sensing platform takes advantage of the tunable optical and structural characteristics of porous AAO with high specific surface area.
Sapphire fiber is inherently multi-mode, which offers advantages for evanescent-field based sensing and measurements attributable to the strong mode-field overlap in the presence of the excitation of higher order modes. AAO serving as sapphire fiber cladding can significantly extend the evanescent field from the surface of the fiber to the cladding with stronger field overlap.
The structure of the exemplary AAO cladding described herein (e.g., pore channel diameter and interpore distance) may be easily tailored to tune optical properties, making it possible to engineer the light propagation through the sapphire fiber. The high specific surface area of the AAO cladding also provides an abundance of molecular adsorption sites and allows rapid access of target analytes for evanescent-field laser spectroscopy interrogation. The AAO cladding may also function as a host and stabilizer of plasmonic nanoparticles, making surface-enhanced Raman scattering (“SERS”) measurements at high temperatures possible.
The material similarity between AAO and sapphire (both of which are aluminum oxide materials) preserves the integrity of the exemplary NSOF. Further, the pore size, interpore distance, and pore depth of the exemplary AAO structure can be precisely controlled by varying the parameters of the fabrication process, such as anodization voltage, anodization time, electrolyte concentration, etc. Consequently, a fiber cladding with a desired refractive index can be obtained.
To realize the sensing capability of the exemplary sensor, laser spectroscopy is employed. In one embodiment of the present invention, SERS is used as a sensing modality due to its high sensitivity and specificity. An exemplary SERS signal may be generated by immobilizing the nanoparticles on the AAO structure, thereby enhancing the intensity of Raman signals when molecules are attached to nanoparticles (e.g. silver nanoparticles, gold nanoparticles, etc.). The nanoporous structure of AAO can effectively stabilize silver or gold nanoparticles to prevent their aggregation and Ostwald ripening, thereby preserving their high-temperature SERS activity. Additionally, nanoparticles with high melting temperatures and localized surface plasmon resonance in the ultraviolet (“UV”) region, such as palladium nanoparticles or platinum nanoparticles, may be stabilized in the same exemplary structure to produce a high-temperature UV-SERS.
Referring to
Referring now to
The silver nanoparticles synthesized using the method described above may then become immobilized through electrostatic interactions between a positively-charged polyallylamine hydrochloride (“PAH”) surface and negatively charged silver nanoparticles by the following exemplary procedure. The sensing platform (i.e., the NSOF/AAO structure) may first be immersed in a solution of about 0.2 mg mL−1 PAH at pH 9 for 20 minutes, and may then be rinsed with purified water at pH 4.5 to remove any free or loosely bound PAH. Silver nanoparticles may subsequently be attached to the PAH-modified sensing platform by immersing the sensing platform in a solution of roughly 1012 particles mL−1 at pH 5.5 for 1 hour.
In another exemplary technique, silver nanoparticles may be incorporated into AAO cladding via in-situ growth from electroless-deposited silver seeds. According to such an exemplary technique, AAO cladding may be immersed in an aqueous mixture of SnCl2 (0.02M) and HCl (0.02M) for 2 minutes, resulting in the deposition of Sn+2 on the pore walls. The AAO cladding may then be soaked in 0.02M aqueous AgNO3 solution for 2 minutes to reduce silver seeds. This deposition cycle may be repeated (e.g., for five repetitions) to provide a high coverage density of silver seeds on the pore walls within the AAO cladding. Following the electroless deposition of silver seeds, large and highly concentrated silver nanoparticles may be formed through a heterogeneous nucleation and growth mechanism by immersing the AAO cladding in an aqueous mixture of 10 mM AgNO3 and 100 mM ascorbic acid for 2 hours.
The foregoing exemplary processes may be readily adapted to negatively-charged gold and other metals (e.g., platinum or palladium) useful for SERS analysis by one having ordinary skill in the art and possession of the present disclosure.
It will be known to those of skill in the art that silver nanoparticles are prone to coalesce into single large particles at high temperatures, thereby greatly reducing SERS activity.
The exemplary NSOF/AAO sensing platform described above may be suited for chemical sensing and measurements in harsh environments at high temperatures, which is an area of great scientific significance and technological impact.
It will be understood that the embodiments of the present invention described herein are merely exemplary and that a person skilled in the art may make many variations and modifications without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. All such variations and modifications are intended to be included within the scope of the invention, as described in the following claims.
This invention was supported in part by funds from the U.S. government (NSOF ECCS Grant No. 1325367). The U.S. government may therefore have certain rights in the invention.
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20160298253 A1 | Oct 2016 | US |
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61977452 | Apr 2014 | US |