Open Cross-gap Gold
Nanocubes with Strong, Large-Area,
Symmetric Electromagnetic Field Enhancement for On-Particle Molecular-Fingerprint
Raman Bioassays
posted on 2024-05-13, 13:04authored byJiyeon Kim, Jae-Myoung Kim, Kyungin Choi, Jeong-Eun Park, Jwa-Min Nam
Plasmonic nanoparticles with an externally open nanogap
can localize
the electromagnetic (EM) field inside the gap and directly detect
the target via the open nanogap with surface-enhanced Raman scattering
(SERS). It would be beneficial to design and synthesize the open gap
nanoprobes in a high yield for obtaining uniform and quantitative
signals from randomly oriented nanoparticles and utilizing these particles
for direct SERS analysis. Here, we report a facile strategy to synthesize
open cross-gap (X-gap) nanocubes (OXNCs) with size- and EM field-tunable
gaps in a high yield. The site-specific growth of Au budding structures
at the corners of the AuNC using the principle that the Au deposition
rate is faster than the surface diffusion rate of the adatoms allows
for a uniform X-gap formation. The average SERS enhancement factor
(EF) for the OXNCs with 2.6 nm X-gaps was 1.2 × 109, and the EFs were narrowly distributed within 1 order of magnitude
for ∼93% of the measured OXNCs. OXNCs consistently displayed
strong EM field enhancement on large particle surfaces for widely
varying incident light polarization directions, and this can be attributed
to the symmetric X-gap geometry and the availability of these gaps
on all 6 faces of a cube. Finally, the OXNC probes with varying X-gap
sizes have been utilized in directly detecting biomolecules with varying
sizes without Raman dyes. The concept, synthetic method, and biosensing
results shown here with OXNCs pave the way for designing, synthesizing,
and utilizing plasmonic nanoparticles for selective, quantitative
molecular-fingerprint Raman sensing and imaging applications.