| Literature DB >> 30873763 |
Jihyun Kwak1,2, Wonkyoung Lee1,2,3, Jae-Beom Kim1,2, Sang-In Bae1,2, Ki-Hun Jeong1,2.
Abstract
We report a fiber-optic plasmonic probe with nanogap-rich gold nanoislands for on-site surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). The plasmonic probe features nanogap-rich Au nanoislands on the top surface of a single multimode fiber. Au nanoislands were monolithically fabricated using repeated solid-state dewetting of thermally evaporated Au thin film. The plasmonic probe shows 7.8 × 106 in SERS enhancement factor and 100 nM in limit-of-detection for crystal violet under both the excitation of laser light and the collection of SERS signals through the optical fiber. The fiber-through measurement also demonstrates the label-free SERS detection of folic acid at micromolar level. The plasmonic probe can provide a tool for on-site and in vivo SERS applications.Entities:
Keywords: fiber optics; nanofabrication; plasmonics; solid-state dewetting; surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy
Mesh:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30873763 PMCID: PMC6975223 DOI: 10.1117/1.JBO.24.3.037001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Opt ISSN: 1083-3668 Impact factor: 3.170
Fig. 1Fiber-optic plasmonic probe for SERS with nanogap-rich Au nanoislands on the top surface of a MMF. (a) A schematic illustration of the plasmonic probe, where both the laser excitation and the collection of SERS signals are transmitted through a multimode optical fiber. (b) Plasmonic Au nanoislands on the fiber-top surface fabricated using a single or repeated solid-state dewetting of thin Au film. The repeated solid-state dewetting simply creates nanogap-rich Au nanoislands with highly dense and strongly coupled EM fields, i.e., plasmonic hotspots, and thus allow strong light excitation as well as highly sensitive SERS detection of biomolecules, compared to the single dewetting.
Fig. 2Nanofabrication procedure for fiber-optic plasmonic SERS probe. (a) A batch-loading mount for multiple optical fibers, which can be placed on the loading chuck of thermal evaporator. (b) Nanofabrication procedures of nanogap-rich Au nanoislands on a fiber-top surface using repeated solid-state dewetting of thin Au film. (c) A SEM image of the fabricated plasmonic fiber-optic probe (top) and an optical image of multiple plasmonic probes on the batch-loading mount (bottom). (d) SEM images of Au nanoislands on the fiber-top surfaces using single or repeated dewetting of different initial thin Au film thickness. Au nanoislands by single dewetting for 5- and 10-nm film thicknesses denoted by and 10 nm, respectively, and those of repeated dewetting for initial and additional 5-nm thicknesses of Au films denoted by and . (e) Effective diameters and effective gap size of Au nanoislands for each fabrication condition extracted from the SEM.
Fig. 3Plasmonic properties of nanogap-rich Au nanoislands on fiber-top surfaces. (a) The calculated electric field distribution of Au nanoislands obtained from (a) single dewetting and (b) repeated dewetting using the FDTD method. (c) Areal ratio of hotspots for the total enhanced -field enhancement. (d) Areal SERS EFs of Au nanoislands depending on the initial thicknesses of Au thin film.
Fig. 4SERS EFs and fiber-though SERS measurements. (a) SERS EFs for Au nanoislands on the fiber-top surfaces depending on the repeated dewetting conditions. (b) A schematic diagram of experimental setup for fiber-through SERS measurement. Both laser excitation and collection of SERS signals are coupled through the fiber-optic plasmonic probe. (c) Measured SERS signals through the plasmonic fiber ( and ) depending on different concentrations of CV molecules. (d) Quantitative SERS measurements of CV molecules using the plasmonic fiber-optic probe. Each SERS peak of CV molecules increases with the concentration of CV molecules. (e) Measured SERS signals of FA, well-known as a cancer biomarker.