posted on 2022-02-09, 14:07authored bySungeun Go, Sungjae Yoo, Jiwoong Son, Soohyun Lee, Jaewon Lee, Sungwoo Lee, Jeongwon Kim, Minsun Park, Woocheol Park, Jae-Myoung Kim, Jwa-Min Nam, Sungho Park
The
development of a stepwise synthetic strategy for Au ring-in-a-triangle
nanoframes with a high degree of structural solidity is essential
to the advancement of highly amplified near-field focusing. This strategy
leads to the formation of an inscribed nanoring in a triangular metal
frame with stability to withstand elevated temperatures and an oxidizing
environment, which is critical for successful single-particle surface-enhanced
Raman scattering (SERS). The existence of inscribed nanorings plays
an important role in enhancing the so-called “lightning rod
effect,” whereby the electromagnetic near-field enhancement
occurs on the highly curved curvature of a metallic interface. We
evaluated the corresponding single-particle SERS as a function of
the thickness of the rims and then constructed two-dimensional (2D)
bulk SERS substrates, wherein an ensemble of hotspots exists. The
synergic contribution from both inter- and intrahotspots allowed the
outstanding linearity of the calibration curve and the lowest limit
of detection, ∼10–18 M for the analyte concentration.