4.7 Article

Gold surface cleaning by etching polishing: Optimization of polycrystalline film topography and surface functionality for biosensing

Journal

SURFACES AND INTERFACES
Volume 22, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.surfin.2020.100818

Keywords

polycrystalline gold films; soft wet chemical polishing; gold cleaning; hydrochloric acid and hydrogen peroxide; protein adsorption; surface plasmon resonance

Funding

  1. DAAD [57314021]
  2. Brandenburg Technical University Cottbus-Senftenberg
  3. Institute of Advance Study of the Durham University

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This study investigated the cleaning and polishing of polycrystalline gold films for surface functionalization by wet chemical etching in hydrochloric acid and hydrogen peroxide solutions. The optimized surfaces showed reduced roughness, removed contaminants, increased hydrophilicity and modified the gold surface. This method offers a simple, reliable and rapid technique for preparing gold surfaces for further functionalization in chemical and biochemical sensing applications.
Modern bio-chemical sensors rely on functional interfacial architectures with well-defined structural nano-motifs over a physical transducer. Gold-coated interfaces are of particular interest for their desirable chemical (functionalization) and optical (plasmonic) properties. Here we investigate the cleaning and polishing of polycrystalline gold films in preparation of advanced surface functionalization. We focus on soft wet chemical etching to decrease the small-scale roughness commonly observed after evaporation or sputtering of gold. We show that optimized surfaces are obtained by etching in solutions of hydrochloric acid and hydrogen peroxide. We systematically quantify the films wettability, surface nano-topography, UV-VIS spectrum and the electrochemical and Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) changes throughout the etching process. Optimal results are obtained by etching with a HCl(37%):H2O2(30%):H2O mixture, with a volume ratio of reagents 3:3:94 during 15-20 minutes at room temperature for the main step. This reduces by a factor two the root-mean-square roughness, removes contaminants, increases hydrophilicity and modifies the gold surface by Au(Cl)(x) complexes. Significantly, the resulting the surface is hydrophilic enough to prevent globular proteins such as HSA to unfold upon deposition at concentrations more than similar to 1 mg/mL. Our protocol offers a simple, reliable and rapid method for the preparation of gold surface in view of further functionalization including the binding of receptor layers and various microand nanostructures required in chemical and biochemical sensing.

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