| Literature DB >> 35055189 |
Soo Hyun Lee1, Sunho Kim2, Jun-Yeong Yang1, ChaeWon Mun1, Seunghun Lee1, Shin-Hyun Kim2, Sung-Gyu Park1.
Abstract
Effective hotspot engineering with facile and cost-effective fabrication procedures is critical for the practical application of surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). We propose a SERS substrate composed of a metal film over polyimide nanopillars (MFPNs) with three-dimensional (3D) volumetric hotspots for this purpose. The 3D MFPNs were fabricated through a two-step process of maskless plasma etching and hydrogel encapsulation. The probe molecules dispersed in solution were highly concentrated in the 3D hydrogel networks, which provided a further enhancement of the SERS signals. SERS performance parameters such as the SERS enhancement factor, limit-of-detection, and signal reproducibility were investigated with Cyanine5 (Cy5) acid Raman dye solutions and were compared with those of hydrogel-free MFPNs with two-dimensional hotspots. The hydrogel-coated MFPNs enabled the reliable detection of Cy5 acid, even when the Cy5 concentration was as low as 100 pM. We believe that the 3D volumetric hotspots created by introducing a hydrogel layer onto plasmonic nanostructures demonstrate excellent potential for the sensitive and reproducible detection of toxic and hazardous molecules.Entities:
Keywords: hydrogel encapsulation; maskless plasma etching; surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy; volumetric hotspot engineering
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35055189 PMCID: PMC8779965 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23021004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Scheme 1Fabrication procedure for the hydrogel-coated MFPN SERS platform.
Figure 1Morphological and crystalline analyses of the hydrogel coated metal film (Au/Ag) over polyimide (PI) nanopillars (PNs)(MFPNs). (a,b) FE-SEM images of the MFPNs without and with hydrogel encapsulation. Structural and crystalline properties of the hydrogel-coated MFPNs observed by (c,d) FE-TEM images, (e) HR-TEM image, and (f) the fast Fourier transform of the image in (e). (g) Compositional analysis with elemental mapping of Ag, Au, C, and O in the hydrogel-coated MFPNs. (h) Scattering intensity of the nonplasmonic PNs and plasmonic MFPNs with and without the hydrogel skin. The photograph of (h) demonstrates the true color of scattered light. (i) Numerically calculated E-field profiles of the hydrogel-coated MFPNs.
Figure 2Sensitivity and LOD of the metal film (Au/Ag) over polyimide nanopillars (PNs)(MFPNs) with and without the hydrogel skin. Quantitative SERS analysis of the hydrogel-coated MFPNs for Cyanine5 (Cy5) acid concentrations of (a) 1−10 µM and (b) 10 pM to 100 nM. (c) Raman spectra of the plasmonic and nonplasmonic substrates encapsulated with hydrogel matrix. (d) Quantitative Raman intensity at 1352 cm−1 between the MFPNs with and without the hydrogel layer in Cy5 acid at concentrations ranging from 100 pM to 10 µM.
Figure 3Reproducibility of metal film (Au/Ag) over polyimide nanopillars (MFPNs) with and without the hydrogel skin. (a) Strategic diagram of the systematical measurement for Raman mapping. (b) Raman mapping spectra and (c) corresponding Raman intensities at 1352 cm−1 of 10 µM Cyanine5 (Cy5) acid on hydrogel-coated MFPNs. Contour plot for the Raman mapping spectra of 10 µM Cy5 acid on MFPNs (d) with and (e) without hydrogel encapsulation.
Figure 4Variations of the Raman intensity at 1352 cm−1 of 10 µM Cyanine5 (Cy5) acid on metal film (Au/Ag) over polyimide (PI) nanopillars (MFPNs) with and without the hydrogel layer, plotted as a function of the dipping time.