High-Volume Production of Repeatable High Enhancement SERS Substrates Using Solid-State Superionic Stamping
Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) is emerging as a powerful tool for detecting and identifying chemical and biological substances because of its high sensitivity, specificity, speed, and label-free detection. For SERS substrates to be effective in sensing applications, they must exhibit rep...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of manufacturing science and engineering 2024-11, Vol.146 (11) |
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creator | Sultana, Papia Qian, Boqiang Son, ChangHee Kim, Seho Mensing, Glennys Ferreira, Placid |
description | Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) is emerging as a powerful tool for detecting and identifying chemical and biological substances because of its high sensitivity, specificity, speed, and label-free detection. For SERS substrates to be effective in sensing applications, they must exhibit reproducible and robust high signal enhancement and cost-effective scalability. This article introduces a highly sensitive, large-area silver SERS substrate patterned with a uniform array of 3D retroreflecting inverted pyramids and develops a manufacturing pathway for it, using a novel and facile electrochemical imprinting process called solid-state superionic stamping (S4). Substrates, approximately 4 mm2 in area, are produced and tested with 1,2-bis(4-pyridyl) ethylene (BPE). Uniformly high and reproducible spatially averaged enhancement factor (EF), typically around a value of 2 × 107 with a relative standard deviation of 6.7% and a high batch-to-batch repeatability with a relative standard deviation of 10.5% between batches were observed. Passivating a substrate's surface with atomically thin layers of alumina, deposited using atomic layer deposition (ALD) was effective in maintaining the EF constant over a 60-day period, albeit with a trade-off between its EF and its lifespan. S4 has the potential to make substrates with EF consistently greater than 107 available at a cost of $1 to $2 per substrate, allowing SERS to be adopted across a wide spectrum of high-volume applications, including security, food safety, medical diagnostics, and chem-bio analysis. |
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For SERS substrates to be effective in sensing applications, they must exhibit reproducible and robust high signal enhancement and cost-effective scalability. This article introduces a highly sensitive, large-area silver SERS substrate patterned with a uniform array of 3D retroreflecting inverted pyramids and develops a manufacturing pathway for it, using a novel and facile electrochemical imprinting process called solid-state superionic stamping (S4). Substrates, approximately 4 mm2 in area, are produced and tested with 1,2-bis(4-pyridyl) ethylene (BPE). Uniformly high and reproducible spatially averaged enhancement factor (EF), typically around a value of 2 × 107 with a relative standard deviation of 6.7% and a high batch-to-batch repeatability with a relative standard deviation of 10.5% between batches were observed. Passivating a substrate's surface with atomically thin layers of alumina, deposited using atomic layer deposition (ALD) was effective in maintaining the EF constant over a 60-day period, albeit with a trade-off between its EF and its lifespan. 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Manuf. Sci. Eng</addtitle><description>Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) is emerging as a powerful tool for detecting and identifying chemical and biological substances because of its high sensitivity, specificity, speed, and label-free detection. For SERS substrates to be effective in sensing applications, they must exhibit reproducible and robust high signal enhancement and cost-effective scalability. This article introduces a highly sensitive, large-area silver SERS substrate patterned with a uniform array of 3D retroreflecting inverted pyramids and develops a manufacturing pathway for it, using a novel and facile electrochemical imprinting process called solid-state superionic stamping (S4). Substrates, approximately 4 mm2 in area, are produced and tested with 1,2-bis(4-pyridyl) ethylene (BPE). Uniformly high and reproducible spatially averaged enhancement factor (EF), typically around a value of 2 × 107 with a relative standard deviation of 6.7% and a high batch-to-batch repeatability with a relative standard deviation of 10.5% between batches were observed. Passivating a substrate's surface with atomically thin layers of alumina, deposited using atomic layer deposition (ALD) was effective in maintaining the EF constant over a 60-day period, albeit with a trade-off between its EF and its lifespan. 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Manuf. Sci. Eng</stitle><date>2024-11-01</date><risdate>2024</risdate><volume>146</volume><issue>11</issue><issn>1087-1357</issn><eissn>1528-8935</eissn><abstract>Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) is emerging as a powerful tool for detecting and identifying chemical and biological substances because of its high sensitivity, specificity, speed, and label-free detection. For SERS substrates to be effective in sensing applications, they must exhibit reproducible and robust high signal enhancement and cost-effective scalability. This article introduces a highly sensitive, large-area silver SERS substrate patterned with a uniform array of 3D retroreflecting inverted pyramids and develops a manufacturing pathway for it, using a novel and facile electrochemical imprinting process called solid-state superionic stamping (S4). Substrates, approximately 4 mm2 in area, are produced and tested with 1,2-bis(4-pyridyl) ethylene (BPE). Uniformly high and reproducible spatially averaged enhancement factor (EF), typically around a value of 2 × 107 with a relative standard deviation of 6.7% and a high batch-to-batch repeatability with a relative standard deviation of 10.5% between batches were observed. Passivating a substrate's surface with atomically thin layers of alumina, deposited using atomic layer deposition (ALD) was effective in maintaining the EF constant over a 60-day period, albeit with a trade-off between its EF and its lifespan. S4 has the potential to make substrates with EF consistently greater than 107 available at a cost of $1 to $2 per substrate, allowing SERS to be adopted across a wide spectrum of high-volume applications, including security, food safety, medical diagnostics, and chem-bio analysis.</abstract><pub>ASME</pub><doi>10.1115/1.4066398</doi></addata></record> |
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title | High-Volume Production of Repeatable High Enhancement SERS Substrates Using Solid-State Superionic Stamping |
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