Literature DB >> 18612522

Chemically bound gold nanoparticle arrays on silicon: assembly, properties and SERS study of protein interactions.

Agnieszka Kaminska1, Obianuju Inya-Agha, Robert J Forster, Tia E Keyes.   

Abstract

A highly reproducible and facile method for formation of ordered 2 dimensional arrays of CTAB protected 50 nm gold nanoparticles bonded to silicon wafers is described. The silicon wafers have been chemically modified with long-chain silanes terminated with thiol that penetrate the CTAB bilayer and chemically bind to the underlying gold nanoparticle. The silicon wafer provides a reproducibly smooth, chemically functionalizable and non-fluorescent substrate with a silicon phonon mode which may provide a convenient internal frequency and intensity calibration for vibrational spectroscopy. The CTAB bilayer provides a potentially biomimetic environment for analyte, yet allows a sufficiently small nanoparticle separation to achieve a significant electric field enhancement. The arrays have been characterized using SEM and Raman spectroscopy. These studies reveal that the reproducibility of the arrays is excellent both between batches (<10% RSD) and across a single batch (<5% RSD). The arrays also exhibit good stability, and the effect of temperature on the arrays was also investigated. The interaction of protein and amino acid with the nanoparticle arrays was investigated using Raman microscopy to investigate their potential in bio-SERS spectroscopy. Raman of phenylalanine and the protein bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor, BPTI were studied using 785 nm excitation, coincident with the surface plasmon absorbance of the array. The arrays exhibit SERS enhancements of the order of 2.6 x 10(4) for phenylalanine, the standard deviation on the relative intensity of the 1555 cm(-1) mode of phenylalanine is less than 10% for 100 randomly distributed locations across a single substrate and less than 20% between different substrates. Significantly, comparisons of the Raman spectra of the protein and phenylalanine in solution and immobilized on the nanoparticle arrays indicates that the protein is non-randomly orientated on the arrays. Selective SERS enhancements suggest that aromatic residues penetrate through the bilayer inducing conformational changes in the protein.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18612522     DOI: 10.1039/b803007c

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Chem Chem Phys        ISSN: 1463-9076            Impact factor:   3.676


  3 in total

1.  Detection of neuraminidase stalk motifs associated with enhanced N1 subtype influenza A virulence via Raman spectroscopy.

Authors:  JooYoung Choi; Sharon J H Martin; Ralph A Tripp; S Mark Tompkins; Richard A Dluhy
Journal:  Analyst       Date:  2015-11-21       Impact factor: 4.616

2.  The influence of molecular mobility on the properties of networks of gold nanoparticles and organic ligands.

Authors:  Edwin J Devid; Paulo N Martinho; M Venkata Kamalakar; Úna Prendergast; Christian Kübel; Tibebe Lemma; Jean-François Dayen; Tia E Keyes; Bernard Doudin; Mario Ruben; Sense Jan van der Molen
Journal:  Beilstein J Nanotechnol       Date:  2014-09-29       Impact factor: 3.649

3.  SERS detection of Biomolecules at Physiological pH via aggregation of Gold Nanorods mediated by Optical Forces and Plasmonic Heating.

Authors:  Barbara Fazio; Cristiano D'Andrea; Antonino Foti; Elena Messina; Alessia Irrera; Maria Grazia Donato; Valentina Villari; Norberto Micali; Onofrio M Maragò; Pietro G Gucciardi
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-06-01       Impact factor: 4.379

  3 in total

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