TY - JOUR
T1 - Pyruvate in Aqueous Media Probed by Mid-Infrared Quantum Spectroscopy Based on Induced Coherence
AU - Cheng, Lin
AU - Chen, Yu
AU - Cai, Yujie
AU - Wang, Xiaoying
AU - Jia, Yihan
AU - Huang, Kun
AU - Wu, E.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 1995-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - As a key intermediate in energy metabolism, pyruvate concentration can reflect cellular metabolic status. Conventional methods such as enzymatic colorimetric assays offer high sensitivity, but rely on fresh reagents and can modify or deplete the target analyte. Mid-infrared (MIR) spectroscopy simplifies the measurement. However, conventional MIR detection is constrained by limited MIR detector sensitivity and high background noise. Here we present an induced-coherence MIR quantum spectroscopy system that requires neither MIR sources nor detectors. Using a nonlinear Michelson interferometer with an AgGaSe2 crystal (type-I nondegenerate SPDC), we achieve the MIR spectral characterization of pyruvate at 8.5 μm (≈1176 cm−1), corresponding to the C–C vibrational band, while only the near-infrared signal photons are detected. A 10-μm-path liquid cell containing 5 μL of pyruvate solution in ultrapure water and simulated body fluid (SBF) is inserted in the MIR interferometer arm. The absorbance spectra retrieved from quantum interferograms via fast Fourier transform agree with those obtained by conventional MIR spectroscopy using the same sample. Using only near-infrared detection, we perform rapid scans near the zero-path-difference position, enabling nondestructive, label-free quantitative analysis of microliter-scale samples and establishing a linear response to pyruvate concentration. These results highlight the potential of quantum spectroscopy for biomedical sensing and provide a foundation for high-sensitivity MIR spectral analysis in complex physiological environments.
AB - As a key intermediate in energy metabolism, pyruvate concentration can reflect cellular metabolic status. Conventional methods such as enzymatic colorimetric assays offer high sensitivity, but rely on fresh reagents and can modify or deplete the target analyte. Mid-infrared (MIR) spectroscopy simplifies the measurement. However, conventional MIR detection is constrained by limited MIR detector sensitivity and high background noise. Here we present an induced-coherence MIR quantum spectroscopy system that requires neither MIR sources nor detectors. Using a nonlinear Michelson interferometer with an AgGaSe2 crystal (type-I nondegenerate SPDC), we achieve the MIR spectral characterization of pyruvate at 8.5 μm (≈1176 cm−1), corresponding to the C–C vibrational band, while only the near-infrared signal photons are detected. A 10-μm-path liquid cell containing 5 μL of pyruvate solution in ultrapure water and simulated body fluid (SBF) is inserted in the MIR interferometer arm. The absorbance spectra retrieved from quantum interferograms via fast Fourier transform agree with those obtained by conventional MIR spectroscopy using the same sample. Using only near-infrared detection, we perform rapid scans near the zero-path-difference position, enabling nondestructive, label-free quantitative analysis of microliter-scale samples and establishing a linear response to pyruvate concentration. These results highlight the potential of quantum spectroscopy for biomedical sensing and provide a foundation for high-sensitivity MIR spectral analysis in complex physiological environments.
KW - Induced coherence
KW - mid-infrared quantum spectroscopy
KW - pyruvate
KW - quantum nonlinear interference
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105024593457
U2 - 10.1109/JSTQE.2025.3641631
DO - 10.1109/JSTQE.2025.3641631
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105024593457
SN - 1077-260X
VL - 32
JO - IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics
JF - IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics
IS - 4
M1 - 5100108
ER -