Novel "crumpling" of hybrid nanostructures increases SERS senstivity

11/10/2015 Rick Kubetz, College of Engineering

  Schematic illustration of SERS enhancement from a crumpled graphene−Au NPs hybrid structure.</p>

Written by Rick Kubetz, College of Engineering

 
Schematic illustration of SERS enhancement from a crumpled graphene&minus;Au NPs hybrid structure. Raman spectrum is enhanced the most when the target molecule is situated at the center of Au NPs in valley of crumpled graphene as depicted in inset.
Schematic illustration of SERS enhancement from a crumpled graphene−Au NPs hybrid structure. Raman spectrum is enhanced the most when the target molecule is situated at the center of Au NPs in valley of crumpled graphene as depicted in inset.
Schematic illustration of SERS enhancement from a crumpled graphene−Au NPs hybrid structure. Raman spectrum is enhanced the most when the target molecule is situated at the center of Au NPs in valley of crumpled graphene as depicted in inset.
By “crumpling” to increase the surface area of graphene-gold nanostructures, researchers from MechSE have improved the sensitivity of these materials, opening the door to novel opportunities in electronics and optical sensing applications.
 
“I believe that this work will benefit researchers in the area of surface plasmonics by providing a new strategy/design for enhancing the surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) detection limit,” explained Assistant Professor SungWoo Nam. “This mechanical self-assembly strategy will enable a new class of 3D crumpled graphene−gold (Au) nanostructures. The enhanced limit of detection will allow biomedical and environment monitoring of important molecules at high sensitivity by SERS.”
 
SERS substrates are used to analyze the composition of a mixture at the nanoscale for environmental analysis, pharmaceuticals, material sciences, art and archeological research, forensic science, drug detection, food quality analysis, and single cell detection. Using a combination of gold and silver nanoparticles and Raman-active dyes, SERS substrates also can target specific DNA and RNA sequences.
 
“This work demonstrates the unique capability of micro-to-nanoscale topographies of the crumpled graphene-Au nanoparticles—higher density, three-dimensional optically active materials—that are further enhanced by the formation of hot spots, bringing the nanoparticles closer,” explained Juyoung Leem, a graduate student and first author of the study, “Mechanically Self-Assembled, Three-Dimensional Graphene−Gold Hybrid Nanostructures for Advanced Nanoplasmonic Sensors,” published in Nano Letters. “We achieve a 3D crumpled graphene−Au hybrid structure by the delamination and buckling of graphene on a thermally activated, shrinking polymer substrate. This process enables precise control and optimization of the size and spacing of integrated Au nanoparticles on crumpled graphene for higher SERS enhancement.”
 
According to Nam, the 3D crumpled graphene−Au nanostructure exhibits at least one order of magnitude higher SERS detection sensitivity than that of conventional, flat graphene−Au nanoparticles. The hybrid structure is further adapted to arbitrary curvilinear structures for advanced, in situ, nonconventional, nanoplasmonic sensing applications.
 
“One of the key advantages of our platform is its ability to shrink and adapt to complex 3D surfaces, a function that has not been previously demonstrated,” Nam stated. An earlier study by Nam’s research group was the first to demonstrate graphene integration onto a variety of different microstructured geometries, including pyramids, pillars, domes, inverted pyramids, and the 3D integration of gold nanoparticle/graphene hybrid structures.
 
In addition to Leem and Nam, the study’s co-authors include MechSE post-doctoral researcher Pilgyu Kang and graduate student Michael Cai Wang. Experiments were carried out in part in the Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory, the Micro and Nano Technology Laboratory, and the Beckman Institute Imaging Technology Group at Illinois.
 
This work was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research/Asian Office of Aerospace Research Development (AFOSR/AOARD) Nano Bio Info Technology (NBIT) Phase III Program, the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund, and by the Korean-American Scientists and Engineers Association (KSEA).
 
 
 

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This story was published November 10, 2015.