| Literature DB >> 36133286 |
Longkun Yang1, Zhifang Ren1, Meng Zhang1, Yanli Song1, Pan Li1,2, Yun Qiu1, Pingye Deng2, Zhipeng Li1.
Abstract
A three-dimensional porous SERS powder material, Ag nanoparticles-engineered-silica aerogel, was developed. Utilizing an in situ chemical reduction strategy, Ag nanoparticles were densely assembled on porous aerogel structures, thus forming three-dimensional "hot spots" distribution with intrinsic large specific surface area and high porosity. These features can effectively enrich the analytes on the metal surface and provide huge near field enhancement. Highly sensitive and homogeneous SERS detections were achieved not only on the conventional liquid analytes but also on gas with the enhancement factor up to ∼108 and relative standard deviation as small as ∼13%. Robust calibration curves were obtained from the SERS data, which demonstrates the potential for the quantification analysis. Moreover, the powder shows extraordinary SERS stability than the conventional Ag nanostructures, which makes long term storage and convenient usage feasible. With all of these advantages, the porous SERS powder material can be extended to on-site SERS "nose" applications such as liquid and gas detections for chemical analysis, environmental monitoring, and anti-terrorism. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 36133286 PMCID: PMC9418486 DOI: 10.1039/d0na00849d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Adv ISSN: 2516-0230
Fig. 1The surface morphology and elemental analysis of the AgNPs-SA powder. (a) The SEM image of the silica aerogel particle. The inset shows the corresponding magnified image. (b) The surface morphology of the synthesized AgNPs-SA. The inset shows the corresponding magnified image. (c) and (d) The elemental mappings of AgNPs-SA composite in (b) by using Si and Ag, respectively.
The specific surface area, average pore size, and cumulative pore volume of silica aerogel, collapsed-aerogel, AgNPs-SA, and AgNPs aggregates, based on nitrogen adsorption–desorption measurements (Fig. S4)
| Silica aerogel | Collapsed-aerogel | AgNPs-SA | AgNPs aggregates | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Specific surface area | 502 m2 g−1 | 482 m2 g−1 | 123 m2 g−1 | 7 m2 g−1 |
| Average pore size | 27 nm | 8 nm | 10 nm | — |
| Cumulative pore volume | 3.3 m3 g−1 | 1.0 m3 g−1 | 0.35 m3 g−1 | — |
Fig. 2The SERS detection on liquid R6G solution. (a) The SERS spectra of R6G measured at 10−10 M. 30 spots on different AgNPs-SA particles were randomly selected to acquire the spectra. (b) The statistics of SERS intensity at 1362 cm−1. (c) The SERS spectra of R6G at different concentrations (10−8 to 10−12 M). (d) The SERS intensity at 1362 cm−1 as a function of R6G logarithmic concentrations. The error bars indicate the standard deviations of SERS measurements at the randomly selected spots. The red curve presents the corresponding linear fitting line.
Fig. 3The SERS of gaseous 4-ATP molecules. (a) The SERS spectra showing the increasing concentration of gaseous 4-ATP from 0.05 to 1 ppm. (b) Calibration measurements as the function of gaseous 4-ATP concentrations. Black squares: the experimental SERS intensity at 1436 cm−1. Red curve: fitting by the Hill model. The inset shows the linear fitting of I1436 cmversus the concentrations of gaseous 4-ATP (0.05–0.25 ppm). The error bars indicate the standard deviations of SERS measurements at randomly selected spots.
Fig. 4SERS stability of the AgNPs-SA powder. Squares and triangles demonstrate the SERS intensity (I1436 cm of 4-ATP) evolutions of 3D AgNPs-SA powder and conventional 2D AgNPs aggregates with different preserved time in ambient condition, respectively. For comparison, three groups of controlled experiments were done. The dash lines are plotted to guide eyes.