What the study found
The study presents a near-infrared (NIR) multimodal, low-footprint spectroscopy setup that can measure NIR fluorescence and absorption. It also reports that the setup provides quasi-simultaneous access to both types of spectra.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors say NIR techniques are less widespread than visible-light methods because detectors, microscopes, and fluorophores are less available. The study suggests the setup could broaden access to NIR fluorescence and absorption measurements for biosensing applications.
What the researchers tested
The researchers built a NIR multimodal spectroscopy setup using a light-emitting diode (LED) to excite NIR fluorescence, or broadband NIR light to capture absorption spectra from 900 nm to 1650 nm, with a fiber-coupled InGaAs spectrometer. They tested the setup on NIR fluorescent materials, biosensors for dopamine, and carbon nanotubes.
What worked and what didn't
The setup was demonstrated to measure NIR fluorescent materials and dopamine biosensors. It also allowed measurement of absorption and emission spectra almost simultaneously to assess chemical changes in NIR fluorescent carbon nanotubes.
What to keep in mind
The abstract does not describe detailed performance limits, comparison data, or experimental constraints beyond the stated spectral range and small footprint.
Key points
- The paper presents a low-footprint near-infrared multimodal spectroscopy setup.
- The setup measures both NIR fluorescence and absorption spectra.
- It covers an absorption range from 900 nm to 1650 nm using a fiber-coupled InGaAs spectrometer.
- The system was demonstrated on NIR fluorescent materials, dopamine biosensors, and carbon nanotubes.
- The abstract does not give detailed limits or comparison results.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Low-footprint NIR spectroscopy enables quasi-simultaneous biosensing
- Authors:
- Krisztian Neutsch, Jana Nikolić, Asra Mafakheri, Jan Stegemann, Sebastian Kruss
- Institutions:
- Institute for Advanced Studies in Basic Sciences, Fraunhofer Institute for Microelectronic Circuits and Systems
- Publication date:
- 2026-04-22
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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