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Dive into the research topics where Xiao-Chong Yu is active.

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Featured researches published by Xiao-Chong Yu.


Advanced Materials | 2013

Detection of Single Nanoparticles and Lentiviruses Using Microcavity Resonance Broadening

Linbo Shao; Xue-Feng Jiang; Xiao-Chong Yu; Bei-Bei Li; William R. Clements; Frank Vollmer; Wei Wang; Yun-Feng Xiao; Qihuang Gong

A new label-free sensing mechanism is demonstrated experimentally by monitoring the whispering-gallery mode broadening in microcavities. It is immune to both noise from the probe laser and environmental disturbances, and is able to remove the strict requirement for ultra-high-Q mode cavities for sensitive nanoparticle detection. This ability to sense nanoscale objects and biological analytes is particularly crucial for wide applications.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Single nanoparticle detection using split-mode microcavity Raman lasers

Bei-Bei Li; William R. Clements; Xiao-Chong Yu; Kebin Shi; Qihuang Gong; Yun-Feng Xiao

Significance Optical sensing with ultrahigh sensitivity of single nanoscale objects is strongly desirable for applications in various fields, such as in early-stage diagnosis of human diseases and in environmental monitoring, as well as in homeland security. In this article, we report an optical technique for single nanoparticle detection in both air and an aqueous environment, with an ultralow detection limit. Ultrasensitive nanoparticle detection holds great potential for early-stage diagnosis of human diseases and for environmental monitoring. In this work, we report for the first time, to our knowledge, single nanoparticle detection by monitoring the beat frequency of split-mode Raman lasers in high-Q optical microcavities. We first demonstrate this method by controllably transferring single 50-nm–radius nanoparticles to and from the cavity surface using a fiber taper. We then realize real-time detection of single nanoparticles in an aqueous environment, with a record low detection limit of 20 nm in radius, without using additional techniques for laser noise suppression. Because Raman scattering occurs in most materials under practically any pump wavelength, this Raman laser-based sensing method not only removes the need for doping the microcavity with a gain medium but also loosens the requirement of specific wavelength bands for the pump lasers, thus representing a significant step toward practical microlaser sensors.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Single Nanoparticle Detection Using Optical Microcavities

Yanyan Zhi; Xiao-Chong Yu; Qihuang Gong; Lan Yang; Yun-Feng Xiao

Detection of nanoscale objects is highly desirable in various fields such as early-stage disease diagnosis, environmental monitoring and homeland security. Optical microcavity sensors are renowned for ultrahigh sensitivities due to strongly enhanced light-matter interaction. This review focuses on single nanoparticle detection using optical whispering gallery microcavities and photonic crystal microcavities, both of which have been developing rapidly over the past few years. The reactive and dissipative sensing methods, characterized by light-analyte interactions, are explained explicitly. The sensitivity and the detection limit are essentially determined by the cavity properties, and are limited by the various noise sources in the measurements. On the one hand, recent advances include significant sensitivity enhancement using techniques to construct novel microcavity structures with reduced mode volumes, to localize the mode field, or to introduce optical gain. On the other hand, researchers attempt to lower the detection limit by improving the spectral resolution, which can be implemented by suppressing the experimental noises. We also review the methods of achieving a better temporal resolution by employing mode locking techniques or cavity ring up spectroscopy. In conclusion, outlooks on the possible ways to implement microcavity-based sensing devices and potential applications are provided.


Advanced Materials | 2014

Single Nanoparticle Detection and Sizing Using a Nanofiber Pair in an Aqueous Environment

Xiao-Chong Yu; Bei-Bei Li; Pan Wang; Limin Tong; Xue-Feng Jiang; Yan Li; Qihuang Gong; Yun-Feng Xiao

Single-nanoparticle detection and sizing is demonstrated using a nanofiber pair in an aqueous environment. The sizing of nanoparticles with a single radius (100 nm) and of mixed nanoparticles with different radii (100 nm and 170 nm) are both realized, and the experimental results agree well with predictions of Rayleigh-Gans scattering, by taking the inhomogeneous field distribution of the nanofibers into account.


Nano Letters | 2015

Single-Band 2-nm-Line-Width Plasmon Resonance in a Strongly Coupled Au Nanorod.

Pan Wang; Yipei Wang; Zongyin Yang; Xin Guo; Xing Lin; Xiao-Chong Yu; Yun-Feng Xiao; Wei Fang; Lei Zhang; Guowei Lu; Qihuang Gong; Limin Tong

This paper reports a dramatic reduction in plasmon resonance line width of a single Au nanorod by coupling it to a whispering gallery cavity of a silica microfiber. With fiber diameter below 6 μm, strong coupling between the nanorod and the cavity occurs, leading to evident mode splitting and spectral narrowing. Using a 1.46-μm-diameter microfiber, we obtained single-band 2-nm-line-width plasmon resonance in an Au nanorod around a 655-nm-wavelength, with a quality factor up to 330 and extinction ratio of 30 dB. Compared to an uncoupled Au nanorod, the strongly coupled nanorod offers a 30-fold enhancement in the peak intensity of plasmonic resonant scattering.


Light-Science & Applications | 2018

Optically sizing single atmospheric particulates with a 10-nm resolution using a strong evanescent field

Xiao-Chong Yu; Yanyan Zhi; Shui-Jing Tang; Bei-Bei Li; Qihuang Gong; Cheng-Wei Qiu; Yun-Feng Xiao

Although an accurate evaluation of the distribution of ultrafine particulate matter in air is of utmost significance to public health, the usually used PM2.5 index fails to provide size distribution information. Here we demonstrate a low-profile and cavity-free size spectrometer for probing fine and ultrafine particulate matter by using the enhanced particle-perturbed scattering in strong optical evanescent fields of a nanofiber array. The unprecedented size resolution reaches 10 nm for detecting single 100-nm-diameter nanoparticles by employing uniform nanofibers and controlling the polarizations of the probe light. This size spectrometry was tested and used to retrieve the size distribution of particulate matter in the air of Beijing, yielding mass concentrations of nanoparticles, as a secondary exercise, consistent with the officially released data. This nanofiber-array probe shows potential for the full monitoring of air pollution and for studying early-stage haze evolution and can be further extended to explore nanoparticle interactions.


Optics Express | 2015

Analysis of mid-infrared lasing in active random media

Carlo Molardi; Xiao-Chong Yu; Houkun Liang; Yinan Zhang; Cheng-Wei Qiu; Annamaria Cucinotta; Stefano Selleri

Lasing behaviour of 2-dimensional active random structures, designed to work in the Mid-IR region, has been investigated at different input powers by varying the amount of scattering intensity. A Monte Carlo based simulation tool has been developed including a model to manage the optical amplification. The analysis of photon travel distance has been considered to show the random lasing behaviour with particular attention on lasing threshold at different scattering intensity. The simulated results are in agreement with experiments.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Low-threshold Raman laser from an on-chip, high Q polymer microcavity

Bei-Bei Li; William R. Clements; Xiao-Chong Yu; Qihuang Gong; Yun-Feng Xiao

We study the stimulated Raman emission of a high-Q polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-coated silica microsphere on a silicon chip. In this hybrid structure, as the thickness of the PDMS coating increases, the spatial distribution of the whispering gallery modes moves inside the PDMS layer, and the light emission switches from silica Raman lasing to PDMS Raman lasing. The Raman shift of the PDMS Raman laser is measured at 2900 cm-1, corresponding to the strongest Raman fingerprint of bulk PDMS material. The threshold for this PDMS Raman lasing is demonstrated to be as low as 1.3 mW. This type of Raman emission from a surface-coated high-Q microcavity not only provides a route for extending lasing wavelengths, but also shows potential for detecting specific analytes.


Advanced Materials | 2018

On-Chip Spiral Waveguides for Ultrasensitive and Rapid Detection of Nanoscale Objects

Shui-Jing Tang; Shuai Liu; Xiao-Chong Yu; Qinghai Song; Qihuang Gong; Yun-Feng Xiao

Ultrasensitive and rapid detection of nano-objects is crucial in both fundamental studies and practical applications. Optical sensors using evanescent fields in microcavities, plasmonic resonators, and nanofibers allow label-free detection down to single molecules, but practical applications are severely hindered by long response time and device reproducibility. Here, an on-chip dense waveguide sensor to monitor single unlabeled nanoparticles in a strong optical evanescent field is demonstrated. The spiral nanowaveguide design enables two orders of magnitude enhancement in sensing area compared to a straight waveguide, significantly improving the particle capture ability and shortening the target analysis time. In addition, the measurement noise is suppressed to a level of 10-4 in the transmitted power, pushing the detection limit of single particles down to the size of 100 nm. The waveguide sensor on the silicon-on-isolator platform can be fabricated reproducibly by the conventional semiconductor processing and compatible with surface functionalization chemistries and microfluidics, which could lead to widespread use for sensing in environmental monitoring and human health.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2017

Optical microcavity sensing: from reactive to dissipative interactions (Conference Presentation)

Alexis V. Kudryashov; Alan H. Paxton; Vladimir S. Ilchenko; Yanyan Zhi; Bo-Qiang Shen; Xiao-Chong Yu; Li Wang; Donghyun Kim; Qihuang Gong; Yun-Feng Xiao

Single nanoparticle detection is demonstrated using reactive and dissipative interactions in a high-Q optical microcavity. The combination of those two methods adds new dimensions in microcavity sensing.

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