论文标题
通过纤维腔衰减相移光谱检测黄曲霉毒素M1
Detection of Aflatoxin M1 by Fiber Cavity Attenuated Phase Shift Spectroscopy
论文作者
论文摘要
黄曲霉毒素M1(AFM1)是一种通常在WHO允许的限制的牛奶中,尤其是在发展中国家的牛奶中通常发现的致癌化合物。当前,用于牛奶中检测AFM1的最新测试包括色谱系统和酶连接的免疫吸附剂测定法。尽管这些测试提供了公平的准确性和敏感性,但是它们需要训练有素的实验室人员,昂贵的基础设施以及许多小时才能产生最终结果。利用光谱学的光学传感器具有提供准确,实时且无专家的AFM1检测器的巨大潜力。尽管如此,使用光谱法的AFM1传感示范仍然不成熟。在这里,我们展示了一种光学传感器,该光学传感器采用光纤腔中腔衰减的相移光原理,以在1550 nm的水溶液中快速AFM1检测。传感器构成了由两个纤维bragg光栅建造的空腔。我们将锥形纤维缩小为$ <$ 10 $ $ m $ m的腰部,作为传感头。为了确保溶液中AFM1的特异性结合,锥形纤维用DNA适体官能化,然后通过FTIR,TGA和EDX分析验证结合。然后,我们通过测量正弦调制激光输入和腔谐音频率下的传感器输出之间的相移来检测AFM1。我们的结果表明,该传感器的检测限为20 ng/L(20 ppt),该限量远低于美国和欧洲安全法规。我们预计目前的工作将导致快速准确的AFM1传感器,尤其是对于低资源设置。
Aflatoxin M1 (AFM1) is a carcinogenic compound commonly found in milk in excess of the WHO permissible limit, especially in developing countries. Currently, state-of-the-art tests for detecting AFM1 in milk include chromatographic systems and enzyme-linked-immunosorbent assays. Although these tests provide fair accuracy and sensitivity however, they require trained laboratory personnel, expensive infrastructure, and many hours for producing final results. Optical sensors leveraging spectroscopy have a tremendous potential of providing an accurate, real time, and specialists-free AFM1 detector. Despite this, AFM1 sensing demonstrations using optical spectroscopy are still immature. Here, we demonstrate an optical sensor that employs the principle of cavity attenuated phase shift spectroscopy in optical fiber cavities for rapid AFM1 detection in aqueous solutions at 1550 nm. The sensor constitutes a cavity built by two fiber Bragg gratings. We splice a tapered fiber of $<$ 10 $μ$m waist inside the cavity as a sensing head. For ensuring specific binding of AFM1 in a solution, the tapered fiber is functionalized with DNA aptamers followed by validation of the conjugation via FTIR, TGA, and EDX analyses. We then detect AFM1 in a solution by measuring the phase shift between a sinusoidally modulated laser input and the sensor output at resonant frequencies of the cavity. Our results show that the sensor has the detection limit of 20 ng/L (20 ppt) which is well below both the US and the European safety regulations. We anticipate that the present work will lead towards a rapid and accurate AFM1 sensor, especially for low-resource settings.