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      Optical fiber optofluidic laser based on surfactant solubilization of rhodamine B gain in an aqueous solution

      , , , , , ,
      Optics Express
      Optica Publishing Group

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          Abstract

          We report a whispering gallery mode (WGM)-based fiber optofluidic laser (FOFL), in which rhodamine B (RhB) in an aqueous surfactant solution of sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate (SDBS) is used as the laser gain medium. Here, the role of SDBS is to scatter the RhB dye molecules to effectively prevent its self-association in the aqueous solution. Therefore, the fluorescence quantum yield of the used RhB dye is improved due to the enhanced solubilization, which results in a low lasing threshold of ∼2.2 µJ/mm 2 when the concentration of SDBS aqueous solution reaches up to 20 mM, on par with or even better than most of the optofluidic dye lasers using RhB as the gain medium in an organic solution. We then establish a model of solubilization capacity of SDBS micelles, which successfully addresses the mechanisms of dye-surfactant interactions in the proposed FOFL system. We further apply this FOFL platform to the case of concentration sensing of the used SDBS, which exhibits a 2-order-of-magnitude improvement in sensitivity compared to the fluorescence measurement due to the signal amplification inherent to the lasing process. The proposed FOFL platform in combination with surfactant solubilization gain medium in an aqueous solution promises to enable chip-scale coherent light sources for various environmental and bio-chemical sensing applications.

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          Most cited references21

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          Single mode optofluidic distributed feedback dye laser.

          Single frequency lasing from organic dye solutions on a monolithic poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) elastomer chip is demonstrated. The laser cavity consists of a single mode liquid core/PDMS cladding channel waveguide and a phase shifted 15th order distributed feedback (DFB) structure. A 1mM solution of Rhodamine 6G in a methanol and ethylene glycol mixture was used as the gain medium. Using 6 nanosecond 532nm Nd:YAG laser pulses as the pump light, we achieved threshold pump fluence of ~0.8mJ/cm(2) and single-mode operation at pump levels up to ten times the threshold. This microfabricated dye laser provides a compact and inexpensive coherent light source for microfluidics and integrated optics covering from near UV to near IR spectral region.
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            Solubilization of Hydrophobic Dyes in Surfactant Solutions

            In this paper, the use of surfactants for solubilization of hydrophobic organic dyes (mainly solvent and disperse dyes) has been reviewed. The effect of parameters such as the chemical structures of the surfactant and the dye, addition of salt and of polyelectrolytes, pH, and temperature on dye solubilization has been discussed. Surfactant self-assemble into micelles in aqueous solution and below the concentration where this occurs—the critical micelle concentration (CMC)—there is no solubilization. Above the CMC, the amount of solubilized dye increases linearly with the increase in surfactant concentration. It is demonstrated that different surfactants work best for different dyes. In general, nonionic surfactants have higher solubilization power than anionic and cationic surfactants. It is likely that the reason for the good performance of nonionic surfactants is that they allow dyes to be accommodated not only in the inner, hydrocarbon part of the micelle but also in the headgroup shell. It is demonstrated that the location of a dye in a surfactant micelle can be assessed from the absorption spectrum of the dye-containing micellar solution.
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              Optical Fiber Optofluidic Bio‐Chemical Sensors: A Review

              Optofluidic, as an emerging technology that combines photons and microfluidics, has become a powerful, intelligent, and universal sensing platform in the field of bio‐chemical sensing. Optical fiber optofluidic (OFOF), as a branch of optofluidic technology, has stimulated a host of remarkable achievements in the field of bio‐chemical sensing due to its superiority of compact structure, immunity to electromagnetic interference, low sample consumption, high sensitivity, and real‐time dynamic response. In this paper, an overview of OFOF bio‐chemical sensors is presented. The OFOF system architectures are introduced and some advanced functional materials and coating technologies that can be utilized in the OFOF sensing platform to achieve high‐performance biochemical sensing are summarized. Research progress and current status of OFOF bio‐chemical sensors based on various sensing mechanisms are summarized and analyzed, with emphases on their sensing principles, sensing structures, sensing applications, advantages, and disadvantages. Lastly, the existing challenges and future development trends of OFOF biochemical sensors are briefly discussed.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                OPEXFF
                Optics Express
                Opt. Express
                Optica Publishing Group
                1094-4087
                2022
                2022
                June 10 2022
                June 20 2022
                : 30
                : 13
                : 23295
                Article
                10.1364/OE.461670
                656a80e6-8ebe-48d5-902d-6c0a52066e69
                © 2022

                https://doi.org/10.1364/OA_License_v2#VOR-OA

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