Plasmonic Coupling of AgNPs near Graphene Edges: A
Cross-Section Strategy for High-Performance SERS Sensing
Posted on 2020-04-29 - 15:05
Fully
exploiting plasmonic coupling of nanostructured metals is
an effective method to promote surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS)
performance for trace detection of molecules. Herein, we propose a
cross-section strategy to maximize plasmonic coupling of silver nanoparticles
(AgNPs) in a graphene-based membrane. Specifically, AgNPs are isolated
by water-dispersible graphene (W-Gr) and enriched in the vicinity
of W-Gr edges when assembling into a macroscopic membrane, thus affording
AgNPs on the cross section with uniform and proper gaps in the vertical
plane to generate maximal plasmon coupling. Moreover, the superior
sensitivity (5 × 10–13 M for R6G) to most reported
graphene–metal structures and the long-term stability against
aerobic oxidation jointly make the cross-section of the AgNPs/W-Gr
membrane a potential SERS substrate for trace-molecule detection.
The revealed mechanism for AgNPs enrichment near edges highlights
the importance of the flow-directed assembly process of W-Gr. This
work provides new insight into the interpretation and utilization
of two-dimensional materials as building blocks in high-performance
SERS sensing.
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Cao, Ziyang; He, Peng; Huang, Tao; Yang, Siwei; Han, Sancan; Wang, Xianying; et al. (2020). Plasmonic Coupling of AgNPs near Graphene Edges: A
Cross-Section Strategy for High-Performance SERS Sensing. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemmater.9b05293