| Literature DB >> 30873327 |
Yarong Su1,2, Yuanzhen Shi1, Ping Wang1, Jinglei Du1, Markus B Raschke3, Lin Pang1.
Abstract
In surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS), both chemical (CE) and electromagnetic (EM) field effects contribute to its overall enhancement. However, neither the quantification of their relative contributions nor the substrate dependence of the chemical effect have been well established. Moreover, there is to date no understanding of a possible coupling between both effects. Here we demonstrate how systematically engineered silver and gold planar and nanostructured substrates, covering a wide range of field enhancements, provide a way to determine relative contributions of chemical and electromagnetic field-enhancement in SERS measurements of benzenethiol. We find a chemical enhancement of 2 to 14 for different vibrational resonances when referencing against a vibrational mode that undergoes minimal CE. The values are independent of substrate type and independent of the enhancement of the electromagnetic intensity in the range from 1 to 106. This absence of correlation between chemical and electromagnetic enhancement resolves several long-standing controversies on substrate and intensity dependence of the chemical enhancement and allows for a more systematic design of SERS substrates with desired properties.Entities:
Keywords: benzenethiol; chemical enhancement; physical enhancement; quantification; surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS)
Year: 2019 PMID: 30873327 PMCID: PMC6404390 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.10.56
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1(a) Schematic of experimental arrangement and range of SERS substrates used with different enhancements. (b) Vibrational resonances of benzenethiol with nuclear motion as indicated and (c) corresponding SERS spectrum on a Ag nanosubstrate.
Figure 2Raman spectra of benzenethiol on different substrates for 633 nm excitation (corresponding data for 785 nm excitation, see Supporting Information File 1). (a) Liquid benzenthiol, (b) Au film, (c) Ag film, (d) Ag grating, and (e) Ag nanostructure. (f–j) Corresponding intensity ratios of the ω2 and ω3 modes normalized to the ω1 modes for both 633 nm and 785 nm excitation. Each data set is the average from measurements at ten different sample locations. The error bars represent the standard deviations.
Raman enhancement factors for different substrates with 633 nm excitation.
| substrate | EF | EFω3/EFω1 | EFω2/EFω1 | ||
| ω1 | ω2 | ω3 | |||
| Au film | 7.8 | 24 | 1.1 × 102 | 12 ± 1 | 2.1 ± 0.1 |
| Ag film | 3.1 × 102 | 5.8 × 102 | 3.9 × 103 | 13 ± 2 | 2.1 ± 0.1 |
| Ag grating | 1.3 × 104 | 3.1 × 104 | 1.4 × 105 | 11 ± 1 | 2.4 ± 0.5 |
| Ag nano | 1.2 × 106 | 2.7 × 106 | 1.2 × 107 | 12 ± 2 | 2.5 ± 0.3 |
Figure 3(a) Relative Chemical enhancement (CErel) factor versus relative electromagnetic enhancement (EMrel) for different substrates with 633 nm (black) and 785 nm (red) excitation (with incident laser power of 2 × 107 mW/cm2) ω2 and ω3. (b) Chemical enhancement as a function of incident laser intensity for the Ag nanosubstrate with 633 nm (black) and 785 nm (red) excitation.