Enantiomer-Selective Molecular Sensing in the Nonlinear Optical Regime via Upconverting Chiral Metamaterials

  • Kyu Tae Lee
  • , Byunghoon Kim
  • , Lakshmi Raju
  • , Sean P. Rodrigues
  • , Doo Hyun Ko
  • , Wenshan Cai

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

Enantiomers are chiral isomers in which the isomer's structure itself and its mirror image cannot be superimposed on each other. Enantiomer selective sensing is critical as enantiomers exhibit distinct functionalities to their mirror image. Discriminating between enantiomers by optical methods has been widely used as these techniques provide nondestructive characterization, however, they are constrained by the intrinsically small chirality of the molecules. Here, a method to effectively discriminate chiral analytes in the nonlinear regime is demonstrated, which is facilitated by an upconverting chiral plasmonic metamaterial. The different handedness of the chiral molecules interacts with the chiral metamaterial platform, which leads to a change in the circular dichroism of the chiral metamaterial in the near-infrared region. The contrast of the circular dichroism is identified by the upconverted signal in the visible region.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2208641
JournalAdvanced Functional Materials
Volume32
Issue number43
DOIs
StatePublished - 21 Oct 2022

Keywords

  • chiral biosensing
  • circular dichroism
  • metamaterials
  • upconversion

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