Paper
8 September 2011 A new methodology for optical sensing and identification using optical-disc drives
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 8007, Photonics North 2011; 800719 (2011) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.905476
Event: Photonics North 2011, 2011, Ottawa, Canada
Abstract
Optical disc drives are inexpensive, readily available, and use highly sophisticated optoelectronic components which can be adapted for sensing. One limitation of using compact discs (CDs) and optical disk drives for sensing of analytes placed on a CD is the fluctuations in the voltage signal from the disk drive generated while reading the data on the CD. In this study, we develop a simple, low-cost strategy for sensing and identification using CDs and optical disk drives that spectrally separates contributions to the voltage signal caused by an analyte intentionally placed onto the CD and that caused by the underlying data on the CD. Analytes are printed onto a CD surface with fixed spatial periodicity. As the laser beam in an optical disk drive scans over the section of the CD containing the analyte pattern, the intensity of the laser beam incident onto the photodiode integrated into the disk drive is modulated at a frequency dependent on the spatial periodicity of the analyte pattern and the speed of the optical disk drive motor. Fourier transformation of the voltage signal from the optical disk drive yields peaks in the frequency spectrum with amplitudes and locations that enable analyte sensing and identification, respectively. We study the influence of analyte area coverage, pattern periodicity, and CD rotational frequency on the peaks in the frequency spectrum associated with the patterned analyte. We apply this technique to discriminate differently-coloured analytes, perform trigger-free detection of multiple analytes distributed on a single CD, and detect at least two different, overlapped analyte patterns on a single CD. The extension of this technique for sensing and identification of colorimetric chemical reagents is discussed. Future work will focus on adapting this technique to perform measurements at multiple wavelengths and streamlining the data collection and processing.
© (2011) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Samuel Schaefer and Kenneth J. Chau "A new methodology for optical sensing and identification using optical-disc drives", Proc. SPIE 8007, Photonics North 2011, 800719 (8 September 2011); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.905476
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KEYWORDS
Compact discs

Optical discs

Chemical analysis

Photodiodes

Printing

Error analysis

Optical sensing

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