State Key Laboratory of Physical Chemistry of Solid Surfaces and College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Xiamen University, Xiamen 361005, China.
Nature. 2010 Mar 18;464(7287):392-5. doi: 10.1038/nature08907.
Surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) is a powerful spectroscopy technique that can provide non-destructive and ultra-sensitive characterization down to single molecular level, comparable to single-molecule fluorescence spectroscopy. However, generally substrates based on metals such as Ag, Au and Cu, either with roughened surfaces or in the form of nanoparticles, are required to realise a substantial SERS effect, and this has severely limited the breadth of practical applications of SERS. A number of approaches have extended the technique to non-traditional substrates, most notably tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (TERS) where the probed substance (molecule or material surface) can be on a generic substrate and where a nanoscale gold tip above the substrate acts as the Raman signal amplifier. The drawback is that the total Raman scattering signal from the tip area is rather weak, thus limiting TERS studies to molecules with large Raman cross-sections. Here, we report an approach, which we name shell-isolated nanoparticle-enhanced Raman spectroscopy, in which the Raman signal amplification is provided by gold nanoparticles with an ultrathin silica or alumina shell. A monolayer of such nanoparticles is spread as 'smart dust' over the surface that is to be probed. The ultrathin coating keeps the nanoparticles from agglomerating, separates them from direct contact with the probed material and allows the nanoparticles to conform to different contours of substrates. High-quality Raman spectra were obtained on various molecules adsorbed at Pt and Au single-crystal surfaces and from Si surfaces with hydrogen monolayers. These measurements and our studies on yeast cells and citrus fruits with pesticide residues illustrate that our method significantly expands the flexibility of SERS for useful applications in the materials and life sciences, as well as for the inspection of food safety, drugs, explosives and environment pollutants.
表面增强拉曼散射(SERS)是一种强大的光谱技术,可提供无损和超灵敏的单分子级别的特性描述,与单分子荧光光谱相当。然而,通常需要基于 Ag、Au 和 Cu 等金属的基底,要么具有粗糙表面,要么形成纳米粒子,才能实现显著的 SERS 效应,这严重限制了 SERS 的实际应用范围。许多方法已经将该技术扩展到非传统基底,最著名的是尖端增强拉曼光谱(TERS),其中被探测的物质(分子或材料表面)可以在普通基底上,而基底上方的纳米尺度金尖端充当拉曼信号放大器。缺点是来自尖端区域的总拉曼散射信号相当微弱,因此限制了 TERS 研究仅限于具有大拉曼截面的分子。在这里,我们报告了一种方法,我们称之为壳层隔离纳米粒子增强拉曼光谱,其中拉曼信号放大由具有超薄二氧化硅或氧化铝壳的金纳米粒子提供。单层这种纳米粒子作为“智能灰尘”散布在要探测的表面上。超薄涂层可防止纳米粒子聚集,使它们与被探测材料隔离,并允许纳米粒子适应基底的不同轮廓。在 Pt 和 Au 单晶表面吸附的各种分子以及具有氢单层的 Si 表面上获得了高质量的拉曼光谱。这些测量以及我们对酵母细胞和带有农药残留的柑橘类水果的研究表明,我们的方法显著扩展了 SERS 在材料和生命科学中的有用应用的灵活性,以及对食品安全、药物、爆炸物和环境污染物的检测。