Paper
13 October 1994 Sol-gel coatings for optical chemical sensors and biosensors
Brian D. MacCraith, Colette M. McDonagh, Gerard O'Keeffe, Aisling K. McEvoy, Thomas M. Butler, Fidelma R. Sheridan
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Abstract
In this paper an overview is presented of the state-of-the-art of optical sensors which employ sol-gel-derived coatings. The technique is particularly suited to the side-coating of optical fibers or waveguides in evanescent-wave sensors because precise control of sensitivity- determining parameters, such as the coating thickness and length, is achievable. Sensors based on entrapped organic and inorganic dyes, enzymes and other biomolecules have been reported. The main features of the process are illustrated by examples of chemical sensors and biosensors from the literature. In particular, the development of an oxygen sensor based on the quenching of fluorescence from a sol-gel-entrappd ruthenium complex is described. This sensor may be operated in intensity or decay-time mode. The latter offers many advantages over intensity-based sensing and may also be used to provide useful diagnostic information concerning the distribution/accessibility of the sensor fluorophore. Issues which require further investigation before this technology can proceed to the stage of industrial development are also highlighted.
© (1994) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Brian D. MacCraith, Colette M. McDonagh, Gerard O'Keeffe, Aisling K. McEvoy, Thomas M. Butler, and Fidelma R. Sheridan "Sol-gel coatings for optical chemical sensors and biosensors", Proc. SPIE 2288, Sol-Gel Optics III, (13 October 1994); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.188986
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CITATIONS
Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Sol-gels

Oxygen

Luminescence

Optical coatings

Biosensors

Chemical fiber sensors

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