4.8 Article

Selenium Vacancies and Synergistic Effect of Near- and Far-Field- Enabled Ultrasensitive Surface-Enhanced Raman-Scattering-Active Substrates for Malaria Detection

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages 1453-1463

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.1c03873

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Shenzhen Basic Research Grants [JCYJ20200109114801744, JCYJ20180507182431967, JCYJ20170413153246713]
  2. Shenzhen Peacock Technology Innovation Project [KQJSCX20170731165602155]
  3. National Nature Science Foundation of China [11804354, 61774164, 21701185, 61875064]
  4. Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 2 [MOE2019-T2-2-127]
  5. Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 1 [MOE2019-T1-001-103, MOE2019-T1-001-111]
  6. Singapore National Research Foundation Competitive Re-search Program [NRF-CRP18-2017-02]
  7. Nanyang Technological University

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Defect engineering and active control of defect states bring significant enhancement to surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS). In this study, we developed a large-area, uniform, and reliable SERS-active substrate by growing self-grown single-crystalline V-shape SnSe2-x nanoflake arrays with controlled selenium vacancies. Theoretical calculations and experimental results showed that the substrate's superior performance can be attributed to selenium vacancies and the synergistic effect of near and far fields. We also successfully built a detection platform for rapid, antibody-free, in situ, and reliable early malaria detection.
Defect engineering with the active control of defect states brings remarkable enhancement on surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) by magnifying semiconductor-molecule interaction. Such light-trapping architectures can increase the light path length, which promotes photon-analytes interactions and further improves the SERS sensitivity. However, by far the reported semiconductor SERS-active substrates based on these strategies are often nonuniform and commonly in the form of isolated laminates or random clusters, which limit their reliability and stability for practical applications. Herein, we develop self-grown single-crystalline V-shape SnSe2-x (SnSe1.5, SnSe1.75, SnSe2) nanoflake arrays (SnSe2-x NFAs) with controlled selenium vacancies over large-area (10 cm x 10 cm) for ultrahigh-sensitivity SERS. First-principles density functional theory (DFT) is used to calculate the band gap and the electronic density of states (DOS). Based on the Herzberg-Teller theory regarding the vibronic coupling, the results of theoretical calculation reveal that the downshift of band edge and high DOS of SnSe1.75 can effectively enhance the vibronic coupling within the SnSe1.75-R6G system, which in turn enhances the photoinduced charge transfer resonance and contributes to the SERS activity with a remarkable enhancement factor of 1.68 x 107. Furthermore, we propose and demonstrate ultrasensitive (10-15 M for R6G), uniform, and reliable SERS substrates by forming SnSe1.75 NFAs/Au heterostructures via a facile Au evaporation process. We attribute the superior performance of our SnSe1.75 NFAs/Au heterostructures to the following reasons: (1) selenium vacancies and (2) synergistic effect of the near and far fields. In addition, we successfully build a detection platform to achieve rapid (similar to 15 min for the whole process), antibody-free, in situ, and reliable early malaria detection (100% detection rate for 10 samples with 160 points) in whole blood, and molecular hemozoin (<100/mL) can be detected. Our approach not only provides an efficient technique to obtain large-area, uniform, and reliable SERS-active substrates but also offers a substantial impact on addressing practical issues in many application scenarios such as the detection of insect-borne infectious diseases.

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