| Literature DB >> 34947554 |
Mikhail K Tatmyshevskiy1, Dmitry I Yakubovsky1, Olesya O Kapitanova1,2, Valentin R Solovey1, Andrey A Vyshnevyy1, Georgy A Ermolaev1, Yuri A Klishin1, Mikhail S Mironov1, Artem A Voronov1, Aleksey V Arsenin1, Valentyn S Volkov1, Sergey M Novikov1.
Abstract
The development of efficient plasmonic nanostructures with controlled and reproducible surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) signals is an important task for the evolution of ultrasensitive sensor-related methods. One of the methods to improving the characteristics of nanostructures is the development of hybrid structures that include several types of materials. Here, we experimentally investigate ultrathin gold films (3-9 nm) near the percolation threshold on Si/Au/SiO2 and Si/Au/SiO2/graphene multilayer structures. The occurring field enhanced (FE) effects were characterized by a recording of SERS signal from Crystal Violet dye. In this geometry, the overall FE principally benefits from the combination of two mechanisms. The first one is associated with plasmon excitation in Au clusters located closest to each other. The second is due to the gap plasmons' excitation in a thin dielectric layer between the mirror and corrugated gold layers. Experimentally obtained SERS signals from sandwiched structures fabricated with Au film of 100 nm as a reflector, dielectric SiO2 spacer of 50 nm and ultrathin gold atop could reach SERS enhancements of up to around seven times relative to gold films near the percolation threshold deposited on a standard glass substrate. The close contiguity of the analyte to graphene and nanostructured Au efficiently quenches the fluorescent background of the model compound. The obtained result shows that the strategy of combining ultrathin nano-island gold films near the percolation threshold with gap plasmon resonances is promising for the design of highly efficient SERS substrates for potential applications in ultrasensitive Raman detection.Entities:
Keywords: field enhancement; gap surface plasmons; graphene; linear spectroscopy; percolation threshold; plasmonics; surface-enhanced Raman scattering; ultrathin gold films
Year: 2021 PMID: 34947554 PMCID: PMC8708964 DOI: 10.3390/nano11123205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1Schematic 3D representation of (a) glass/Au, (b) film-Au/SiO2/Au, and (c) film-Au/SiO2/graphene/Au substrates, along with (d–f) SEM images and (g–i) AFM images of the ultrathin gold 6 nm thick films onto three different substrates. SEM and AFM images for other thicknesses of ultrathin gold can be found in Supplementary materials (Figure S2).
Figure 2Reflection spectra of the fabricated structures with different thicknesses of gold films for (a) glass/Au, (b) Au/SiO2/Au, and (c) Au/SiO2/graphene/Au. All of the achieved spectra were normalized to the reflection spectrum of a silver mirror.
Figure 3The sheet resistance (R) of Au films as a function of their thickness measured for the three types of structures.
Figure 4SERS spectra of the Crystal Violet dye with a concentration of 10−6 M acquired with a laser excitation of 633 nm. Original spectra and spectra after baseline subtraction for Au/SiO2/Au (a,b), Au/SiO2/graphene/Au (c,d), and glass/Au (e,f) are both provided.
Figure 5(a) SERS spectra of Crystal violet dye obtained for the three types of substrates. (b) Obtained SERS enhancement factors as a function of the thickness of the Au film for all three types of substrates, calculated by the intensity of 207 cm−1 Raman mode.