Ultrasensitive Optical Fingerprinting of Biorelevant Molecules by Means of SERS-Mapping on Nanostructured Metasurfaces.

Biosensors(2022)

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Abstract
The most relevant technique for portable (on-chip) sensors is Surface Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS). This strategy crashes in the case of large (biorelevant) molecules and nano-objects, whose SERS spectra are irreproducible for "homeopathic" concentrations. We suggested solving this problem by SERS-mapping. We analyzed the distributions of SERS parameters for relatively "small" (malachite green (MG)) and "large" (phthalocyanine, HPc*) molecules. While fluctuations of spectra for "small" MG were negligible, noticeable distribution of spectra was observed for "large" HPc*. We show that the latter is due to a random arrangement of molecules with respect to "hot spot" areas, which have limited sizes, thus amplifying the lines corresponding to vibrations of different molecule parts. We have developed a method for engineering low-cost SERS substrates optimized for the best enhancement efficiency and a measurement protocol to obtain a reliable Raman spectrum, even for a countable number of large molecules randomly distributed over the substrate.
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Key words
Raman mapping,SERS,biosensing,nanowires,numerical simulations,track-etched membranes
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