Controlling Microarray Feature Spreading and Response
Stability on Porous Silicon Platforms by Using Alkene-Terminal Ionic
Liquids and UV Hydrosilylation
posted on 2020-05-07, 09:24authored byShruti Trivedi, Sudhir Ravula, Gary A. Baker, Siddharth Pandey, Frank V. Bright
In
an attempt to develop reversible sensors based on ionic liquid/porous
silicon (IL/pSi) platforms, we introduce an approach using task-specific,
alkene-terminal ILs (AT-ILs) for direct grafting to the hydrogen-passivated
as prepared-pSi (ap-pSi) surface via UV-hydrosilylation to address
previous shortcomings associated with IL pattern impermanence (i.e.,
spread). By employing photoluminescence emission (PLE) and Fourier-transform
infrared (FT-IR) imaging measurements, we demonstrate that the covalent
grafting of AT-ILs onto the ap-pSi surface via photochemical hydrosilylation
not only mitigates such feature spreading but also greatly improves
PLE pattern stability. Significantly, we have discovered that, upon
hydrosilylation, the resulting contact pin printed IL features remain
stable to repeated challenges by toluene vapors, demonstrating the
utility of AT-IL hydrosilylation for producing high-fidelity microarray
features on pSi toward robust optical sensory microarrays.