4.7 Article

Directly printed plasmonic substrates of gold micro-flake array for plasmonically-enhanced infrared absorption-spectroscopic biodetection

Journal

SENSORS AND ACTUATORS B-CHEMICAL
Volume 399, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.snb.2023.134841

Keywords

Infrared absorption spectroscopy; Plasmonic substrate; Surface-lattice resonance; Additive printing

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Infrared absorption-spectroscopy (IRAS) is a useful tool for identifying and characterizing molecular species. Plasmonic substrates have greatly enhanced the performance of IRAS technology for high-sensitivity biochemical detection, but their fabrication is still challenging and costly. This study presents a precision photoreduction and replacement reaction combined technology to directly print plasmonic substrates for PEIRAS biodetection. Experimental results show that the printed plasmonic substrate can detect bovine serum albumin at a concentration level of 10 nM, indicating its promising application in IRAS biodetection.
Infrared absorption-spectroscopy (IRAS) is an essential tool for identifying molecular species with specific spectral fingerprints and widely used to characterize and identify known or unknown chemical substances in scientific research and industry. Recently, plasmonic substrates that can dramatically enhance local light field have greatly boosted the performance of IRAS technology, which is generally called plasmonically-enhanced infrared absorption-spectroscopy (PEIRAS), for high-sensitivity biochemical detection. However, the fabrication of micro/nano-structures of noble metals, such as gold and silver, is still challenging and costly, which thus hinders the broad use and further development of PEIRAS technologies. Here, we present a precision photoreduction and replacement reaction combined technology to directly print plasmonic substrates of periodic gold micro-flake array for PEIRAS biodetection. Such a periodic gold micro-flake array exhibits a strong plasmonic surface-lattice resonance whose reflection spectra can be precisely tailored to desired wavelength for PEIRAS biodetection. It has been experimentally demonstrated that the directly printed plasmonic substrate of PEIRAS can be utilized to detect bovine serum albumin via IRAS at the limit of concentration level at 10 nM. The additive printing nature of its fabrication technology makes such a plasmonic substrate promising for widespread IRAS biodetection applications.

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