This work utilizes dark-field optical microscopy to demonstrate the localized surface plasmon resonance λ max response of individual Ag nanoparticles to the formation of a monolayer of small-molecule adsorbates. The adsorption of fewer than 60 000 1-hexadecanethiol molecules on single Ag nanoparticles results in a localized surface plasmon resonance shift of 40.7 nm. Additionally, the kinetics of the single nanoparticle response was shown to be comparable to that of other real-time sensor technologies.
A detailed wavelength-scanned surface-enhanced Raman excitation spectroscopy (WS SERES) study of benzenethiol adsorbed on Ag nanoparticle arrays, fabricated by nanosphere lithography (NSL), is presented. These NSL-derived Ag nanoparticle array surfaces are both structurally well-characterized and extremely uniform in size. The WS SERES spectra are correlated, both spatially and spectrally, with the corresponding localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) spectra of the nanoparticle arrays. The surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) spectra were measured in two excitation wavelength ranges: (1) 425-505 nm, and (2) 610-800 nm, as well as with the 532-nm line from a solid-state diode-pumped laser. The WS SERES spectra have line shapes similar to those of the LSPR spectra. The maximum SERS enhancement factor is shown to occur for excitation wavelengths that are blue-shifted with respect to the LSPR lambda(max) of adsorbate-covered nanoparticle arrays. Three vibrational modes of benzenethiol (1575, 1081, and 1009 cm(-1)) are studied simultaneously on one substrate, and it is demonstrated that the smaller Raman shifted peak shows a maximum enhancement closer to the LSPR lambda(max) than that of a larger Raman shifted peak. This is in agreement with the predictions of the electromagnetic (EM) enhancement mechanism of SERS. Enhancement factors of up to approximately 10(8) are achieved, which is also in good agreement with our previous SERES studies.
mekal theoretically predicted inelastic light scattering in 1923 (1). Raman and Krishnan first experimentally observed the phenomenon and reported in their 1928 Nature paper that the inelastic scattering effect was characterized by "its feebleness in comparison with the ordinary scattering" (2). This "feeble" phenomenon is now known as Raman scattering. The change in wavelength that is observed when a photon undergoes Raman scattering is attributed to the excitation (or relaxation) of vibrational modes of a molecule. Because different functional groups have different characteristic vibrational energies, every molecule has a unique Raman spectrum. In accordance with the Raman selection rule, the molecular polarizability changes as the molecular vibrations displace the constituent atoms from their equilibrium positions. The intensity of Raman scattering is proportional to the magnitude of the change in molecular polarizability. Thus, aromatic molecules exhibit more intense Raman scattering than aliphatic molecules.Even so, Raman scattering cross sections are typically 14 orders of magnitude smaller than those of fluorescence; therefore, the Raman signal is still several orders of magnitude weaker than the fluorescence emission in most cases. Because of the inherently small intensity of the Raman signal, the sensitivity limits of available detectors, and the intensity of the excitation sources, the applicability of Raman scattering was restricted for many years. However, its utility as an analytical technique improved with the advent of the laser and the evolution of photon detection technology.In 1977, Jeanmaire and Van Duyne demonstrated that the magnitude of the Raman scattering signal can be greatly enhanced when the scatterer is placed on or near a roughened noble-metal substrate (3). Strong electromagnetic fields are generated when the localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) of nanoscale roughness features on a silver, gold, or copper substrate is excited by visible light. When the Raman scatterer is subjected to these intensified electromagnetic fields, the magnitude of the induced dipole increases, and accordingly, the intensity of the inelastic scattering increases. This enhanced scattering process is known as surface-enhanced Raman (SER) scattering-a term that emphasizes the key role of the noblemetal substrate in this phenomenon.
In this paper, the electromagnetic interactions between noble metal nanoparticles are studied by measuring the extinction spectra of two-dimensional arrays of Au and Ag cylinders and trigonal prisms that have been fabricated with electron beam lithography. The nanoparticles are typically 200 nm in diameter and 35 nm in height; both hexagonal and square array patterns have been considered with lattice spacings that vary from 230 to 500 nm. The extinction spectra typically have a maximum in the 700-800 nm region of the spectrum, and this maximum blue shifts as lattice spacing is reduced, having typically a 40 nm decrease in λ max for a 100 nm decrease in lattice spacing. The results are similar for the different noble metals, array patterns, and nanoparticle shapes. The extinction spectra have been modeled using coupled dipole calculations, and the observed spectral variations are in good qualitative agreement with experimental data. Moreover, the computational analysis indicates that the blue shifts are due to radiative dipolar coupling between the nanoparticles and retardation effects. These effects result in a net depolarization of the dipole couplings for lattice spacings of 200-500 nm.
Localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) excitation in silver and gold nanoparticles produces strong extinction and scattering spectra that in recent years have been used for important sensing and spectroscopy applications. This article describes the fabrication, characterization, and computational electrodynamics of plasmonic materials that take advantage of this concept.Two applications of these plasmonic materials are presented: (1) the development of an ultrasensitive nanoscale optical biosensor based on LSPR wavelength-shift spectroscopy and (2) the use of plasmon-sampled and wavelength-scanned surface-enhanced Raman excitation spectroscopy (SERES) to provide new insight into the electromagnetic-field enhancement mechanism.
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