• About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact
Wednesday, July 9, 2025
  • Login
Best Technologies
  • Home
  • News
  • Tech
  • Spotlight

    Beyond Short-Term Fixes: How Themis Ecosystem Brings Long-Term Green Solutions

    A look inside both the Legion Go and Steam Deck OLED

    Construction robot builds massive stone walls on its own

    Receive an alert when one of your contacts is about to have a special day

    Here are the best iPad deals right now

    Here are the best smart locks you can buy right now

    Biomass Ultima Micro: A Smart Innovation That Solves a Big Problem

    What is an ‘AI prompt engineer’ and does every company need one?

    Recycled coffee grounds can be used to make stronger concrete

  • Business
  • Space
  • Videos
  • More
    • Mobile
    • Windows
    • Energy
    • Security
    • Health
    • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Tech
  • Spotlight

    Beyond Short-Term Fixes: How Themis Ecosystem Brings Long-Term Green Solutions

    A look inside both the Legion Go and Steam Deck OLED

    Construction robot builds massive stone walls on its own

    Receive an alert when one of your contacts is about to have a special day

    Here are the best iPad deals right now

    Here are the best smart locks you can buy right now

    Biomass Ultima Micro: A Smart Innovation That Solves a Big Problem

    What is an ‘AI prompt engineer’ and does every company need one?

    Recycled coffee grounds can be used to make stronger concrete

  • Business
  • Space
  • Videos
  • More
    • Mobile
    • Windows
    • Energy
    • Security
    • Health
    • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
Best Technologies
No Result
View All Result
Home News

This Tiny Quantum Sensor Glows on Its Own to Detect the Nearly Invisible

by News Room
June 29, 2025
in News
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Scientists at EPFL have created a revolutionary biosensor that doesn’t need a light source—it makes its own glow using quantum tunneling.

By guiding electrons through a nanostructure of gold and aluminum oxide, the sensor emits light and detects molecules at astonishingly small concentrations, down to a trillionth of a gram. With no bulky equipment, it opens the door to powerful, compact diagnostic tools that could be used anywhere, from hospitals to remote environments.

Nanophotonic Biosensors Go Quantum

Optical biosensors work by shining light onto molecules and reading how that light changes. They are vital tools for pinpoint-accurate medical tests, tailoring treatments to individuals, and checking the health of our environment. The smaller the light can be squeezed—right down to nanometers, about the size of a protein—the sharper the detection becomes. Yet shrinking the optics normally demands laser setups and detectors so large and costly that portable or rapid-response testing is almost impossible.

EPFL engineers have now revealed a clever workaround: they replaced the external light source with quantum mechanics. Their chip taps into a phenomenon called inelastic electron tunneling. Give the device a small electric voltage, and electrons leap across an ultrathin barrier, releasing light on the spot. That same burst of light immediately probes any molecules sitting on the sensor.

“If you think of an electron as a wave, rather than a particle, that wave has a certain low probability of ‘tunneling’ to the other side of an extremely thin insulating barrier while emitting a photon of light. What we have done is create a nanostructure that both forms part of this insulating barrier and increases the probability that light emission will take place,” explains Bionanophotonic Systems Lab researcher Mikhail Masharin.

Picogram-Level Sensitivity Achieved

In short, the design of the team’s nanostructure creates just the right conditions for an electron passing upward through it to cross a barrier of aluminum oxide and arrive at an ultrathin layer of gold. In the process, the electron transfers some of its energy to a collective excitation called a plasmon, which then emits a photon. Their design ensures that the intensity and spectrum of this light changes in response to contact with biomolecules, resulting in a powerful method for extremely sensitive, real-time, label-free detection.

“Tests showed that our self-illuminating biosensor can detect amino acids and polymers at picogram concentrations – that’s one-trillionth of a gram – rivaling the most advanced sensors available today,” says Bionanophotonic Systems Laboratory head Hatice Altug.

The work has been published in Nature Photonics in collaboration with researchers at ETH Zurich, ICFO (Spain), and Yonsei University (Korea).

Metasurface Engineered Light Control

At the heart of the team’s innovation is a dual functionality: their nanostructure’s gold layer is a metasurface, meaning it exhibits special properties that create the conditions for quantum tunneling, and control the resulting light emission. This control is made possible thanks to the metasurface’s arrangement into a mesh of gold nanowires, which act as ‘nanoantennas’ to concentrate the light at the nanometer volumes required to detect biomolecules efficiently.

“With potential applications ranging from point-of-care diagnostics to detecting environmental contaminants, this technology represents a new frontier in high-performance sensing systems.”

Bionanophotonic Systems Lab researcher Ivan Sinev

“Inelastic electron tunneling is a very low-probability process, but if you have a low-probability process occurring uniformly over a very large area, you can still collect enough photons. This is where we have focused our optimization, and it turns out to be a very promising new strategy for biosensing,” says former Bionanophotonic Systems Lab researcher and first author Jihye Lee, now an engineer at Samsung Electronics.

In addition to being compact and sensitive, the team’s quantum platform, fabricated at EPFL’s Center of MicroNanoTechnology, is scalable and compatible with sensor manufacturing methods. Less than a square millimeter of active area is required for sensing, creating an exciting possibility for handheld biosensors, in contrast to current tabletop setups.

“Our work delivers a fully integrated sensor that combines light generation and detection on a single chip. With potential applications ranging from point-of-care diagnostics to detecting environmental contaminants, this technology represents a new frontier in high-performance sensing systems,” summarizes Bionanophotonic Systems Lab researcher Ivan Sinev.

Reference: “Plasmonic biosensor enabled by resonant quantum tunnelling” by Jihye Lee, Yina Wu, Ivan Sinev, Mikhail Masharin, Sotirios Papadopoulos, Eduardo J. C. Dias, Lujun Wang, Ming Lun Tseng, Seunghwan Moon, Jong-Souk Yeo, Lukas Novotny, F. Javier García de Abajo and Hatice Altug, 26 June 2025, Nature Photonics.
DOI: 10.1038/s41566-025-01708-y

Never miss a breakthrough: Join the SciTechDaily newsletter.

Source: Sci Tech Daily

Tags: biosensorEPFLnanotechnologyOpticsPhotonicsquantum mechanicssensor

Related Posts

News

Military tech giant Anduril lands in Bellevue, doubling footprint in Seattle region

July 9, 2025
News

Will we ever feel comfortable with AIs taking on important tasks?

July 9, 2025
News

As AI reshapes its workforce, Microsoft commits $4 billion to help others adapt

July 9, 2025
News

Industrial wastewater treatment startup Membrion raises more cash

July 9, 2025
News

How Smartsheet is ‘AI-ifying’ its product and company following $8.4B private equity takeover

July 9, 2025
News

Why falling in love with an AI isn’t laughable, it’s inevitable

July 9, 2025

Trending Now

Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Latest News

Tech

The 35 best Prime Day deals you can get for under $25

July 9, 2025
Business

The ‘Click-to-Cancel’ Rule Was Killed, but Consumer Advocates Could Revive It

July 9, 2025
Security

Get Your Hot Unrivaled Streaming Workouts Right Here, Because Peloton Is On Sale

July 9, 2025
Mobile

Was 2025 the best year to release a Galaxy Flip FE?

July 9, 2025
Tech

The Columbia hack is a much bigger deal than Mamdani’s college application

July 9, 2025
Business

McDonald’s AI Hiring Bot Exposed Millions of Applicants’ Data to Hackers Who Tried the Password ‘123456’

July 9, 2025
Best Technologies

Best Technologies™ is an online tech news portal. It started as an honest effort to provide unbiased and well-suited information on the latest and trending tech news.

Sections

  • Business
  • Energy
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Mobile
  • News
  • Security
  • Space
  • Spotlight
  • Tech
  • Windows

Browse by Topic

AI amazon amazon prime day android Apple apps artificial intelligence buying guides cars deals Donald Trump elon musk energy Entertainment gadgets gaming google health household how to iOS Meta microsoft mobile news Nintendo OpenAI phones policy politics Prime Day privacy review reviews Roundup science security shopping smart home social media space streaming Tech Wearable Xbox

Recent Posts

  • The 35 best Prime Day deals you can get for under $25
  • The ‘Click-to-Cancel’ Rule Was Killed, but Consumer Advocates Could Revive It
  • Get Your Hot Unrivaled Streaming Workouts Right Here, Because Peloton Is On Sale
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact

© 2022 All Right Reserved - Blue Planet Global Media Network

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Tech
  • Spotlight
  • Business
  • Space
  • Videos
  • More
    • Mobile
    • Windows
    • Energy
    • Security
    • Health
    • Entertainment

© 2022 All Right Reserved - Blue Planet Global Media Network

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.