z-logo
Premium
Sonochemical and mechanical stirring synthesis of liquid metal nanograss structures for low‐cost SERS substrates
Author(s) -
Chen Xiaojun,
Chen Qinnan,
Wu Dezhi,
Zheng Yuekun,
Zhou Zhou,
Zhang Kunpeng,
Lv Wenlong,
Zhao Yang,
Lin Liwei,
Sun Daoheng
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of raman spectroscopy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.748
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1097-4555
pISSN - 0377-0486
DOI - 10.1002/jrs.5393
Subject(s) - rhodamine 6g , materials science , nanotechnology , substrate (aquarium) , fabrication , raman scattering , raman spectroscopy , nanostructure , nanoparticle , detection limit , molecule , chemistry , organic chemistry , optics , chromatography , medicine , oceanography , alternative medicine , physics , pathology , geology
Micro‐nanofabrication technologies are frequently used to prepare surface‐enhanced Raman scattering (SERS)‐active substrates with specially shaped microstructures, whose characteristics of high sensitivity and good reproducibility are our unswerving pursuit of the goal. However, these techniques suffer from high cost and low throughput, which limits the fabrication of large‐area SERS substrates and restricts their practical application in detection analysis. Therefore, a low‐cost, facile, and environmentally friendly fabrication strategy for SERS‐active substrates by sonochemical treatment in conjunction with mechanical stirring without surfactants is proposed for the detection of low concentrations of molecules. Liquid metal alloys were employed as SERS‐active substrate materials and are easily oxidized to form an oxide film in air, resulting in good dispersion of the nanoparticles. In addition, nanograss consisting of rod‐like structures and nanogaps formed on the micro/nanoparticle surface, providing numerous SERS‐active sites. The shape, size, and surface nanostructure of the micro/nanoparticles could be tuned by controlling the ultrasonication time and the stirring speed. The performance of the SERS substrate coated with Au film was evaluated by using rhodamine 6G as a probe. The resulting limit of rhodamine 6G detection for the optimized nanograss‐structured substrate by Raman analysis was as low as 10 −7  M, and the standard deviation was 8–15.5%, which meets the requirements for the trace detection of analytes. This facile, large‐scale, low‐cost, and green synthesis of a liquid metal nanograss‐structured substrate with high SERS activity and sensitivity makes it a perfect choice for practical SERS detection applications.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here