4.8 Article

Understanding the Molecule-Surface Chemical Coupling in SERS

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 131, Issue 11, Pages 4090-4098

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja809143c

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Funding

  1. Pennsylvania State University
  2. Research Computing and Cyberinfrastructure
  3. unit of Information Technology Services at Penn State

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The enhancement mechanism due to the molecule-surface chemical coupling in surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) has been characterized using time-dependent density functional theory. This has been achieved with a systematical study of the chemical enhancement of meta- and para-substituted pyridines interacting with a small silver cluster (Ag-20). Changing the functional groups on pyridine enabled us to modulate the direct chemical interactions between the pyridine ring and the metal cluster. Surprisingly, we find that the enhancement does not increase as more charge is transferred from the pyridine ring to the cluster. Instead, we find that the magnitude of chemical enhancement is governed to a large extent by the energy difference between the highest occupied energy level (HOMO) of the metal and the lowest unoccupied energy level (LUMO) of the molecule. The enhancement scales roughly as (omega(X)/(omega) over bar (e))(4), where (omega) over bar (e) is an average excitation energy between the HOMO of the metal and the LUMO of the molecule and omega(X) is the HOMO-LUMO gap of the free molecule. The trend was verified by considering substituted benzenethiols, small molecules, and, silver clusters of varying sizes. The results imply that molecules that show. significant stabilization of the HOMO-LUMO gaps (such as those that readily accept pi-backbonding) would be likely to have strong chemical enhancement. The findings presented here provide the framework for designing new molecules which exhibit high chemical enhancements. However, it remains a challenge to accurately describe the magnitude of the Raman enhancements using electronic structure methods, especially density functional theory, because they often underestimate the energy gap.

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