| Literature DB >> 27356562 |
Marianna Pannico1, Ilaria Rea2, Soundarrajan Chandrasekaran3, Pellegrino Musto1, Nicolas H Voelcker3, Luca De Stefano4.
Abstract
Porous biosilica from diatom frustules is well known for its peculiar optical and mechanical properties. In this work, gold-coated diatom frustules are used as low-cost, ready available, functional support for surface-enhanced Raman scattering. Due to the morphology of the nanostructured surface and the smoothness of gold deposition via an electroless process, an enhancement factor for the p-mercaptoaniline Raman signal of the order of 10(5) is obtained.Entities:
Keywords: Diatoms; SERS; p-Mercaptoaniline
Year: 2016 PMID: 27356562 PMCID: PMC4927532 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-016-1539-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1(a, up left) Single micrometric diatom frustule. (b, up right) Au nanoparticle covers homogeneously the outer and inner surfaces of the frustule. (c, down left) An enlargement of outer surface with pore size measurement. (d, down right) A smaller micrometric frustule. All images are relative to 48 h of Au deposition time
Fig. 2EDAX signal from diatom surface shows only Au characteristic peaks
Fig. 3Raman (red trace) and SERS (blue trace) spectrum of pMA. The estimated number of sampled molecules is 2.55 × 1011 for the Raman spectrum and 2.90 × 106 for SERS, so that an enhancement factor of about 105 can be estimated
Fig. 4Depth profile on a silicon wafer to evaluate the sampling volume (Bν)
Fig. 5SERS spectra collected on different points of the Au-diatom surface. The inset displays the average SERS spectrum (black trace) and the average spectrum ± standard deviation (blue and red traces)