Open Access Article
Olympia
Geladari
ab,
Philipp
Haizmann
a,
Andre
Maier
ab,
Markus
Strienz
c,
Martin
Eberle
a,
Marcus
Scheele
ab,
Heiko
Peisert
ab,
Andreas
Schnepf
*c,
Thomas
Chassé
ab,
Kai
Braun
*ab and
Alfred J.
Meixner
*ab
aInstitut für Physikalische und Theoretische Chemie, Universität Tübingen, Auf der Morgenstelle 18, D-72076 Tübingen, Germany. E-mail: alfred.meixner@uni-tuebingen.de; kai.braun@uni-tuebingen.de
bCenter for Light-Matter Interaction, Sensors & Analytics LISA+, Universität Tübingen, Auf der Morgenstelle 15, D-72076 Tübingen, Germany
cInstitut für Anorganische Chemie, Universität Tübingen, Auf der Morgenstelle 18, D-72076 Tübingen, Germany. E-mail: andreas.schnepf@uni-tuebingen.de
First published on 1st February 2024
The high sensitivity and molecular fingerprint capability of Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy (SERS) have lead to a wide variety of applications ranging from classical physics, chemistry over biology to medicine. Equally, there are numerous methods to fabricate samples owing to the desired properties and to create the localized surface plasmon resonances (LSPRS). However, for many applications the LSPRs must be specifically localized on micrometer sized areas and multiple steps of lithography are needed to achieve the desired substrates. Here we present a fast and reliable direct laser induced writing (DIW) method to produce SERS substrates with active areas of interest in any desired size and shape in the micrometer regime. Afterwards, the SERS substrates have been functionalized with phthalocyanines. The DIW fabricated samples realize sub-monolayer sensitivity and an almost uniform enhancement over the entire area, which make this production method suitable for many sensing applications.
Several promising alternative techniques have been introduced recently for producing uniform, large scale high sensitive SERS substrates such as superelastic nanomolding of sub-micrometer metallic pillar arrays,41,42 optical nanoprinting of colloidal particles by optical gradient and scattering forces on a large variety of different substrates and the formation of light-induced solid-state protrusion of gold nanowires43 or the integration of robust SERS substrates by direct induced laser writing (DIW) with femtosecond laser pulses.44–46
In the present work, we report a new time-saving and cost-effective method for the fabrication of SERS substrates, that makes use of the local surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) of gold nanospheres (Au-NS) with an average size of about 20 nm. The main advantages of this new technique are the fast writing speeds with up to 100 μm s−1, the low cw-laser power that can be used for excitation instead of high-power femtosecond laser pulses for sensitive applications. Most importantly we use gold instead of silver as the targeted material in contrast to most other DIW methods introduced before. The Au-NS are deposited in a targeted manner onto the surface of Si/SiOx wafers by laser-induced printing, allowing us to control the positioning of the nanosphere arrangement with high precision. For adjacent Raman spectroscopy investigations, we fabricate a proof-of-concept SERS substrate, using a transition-metal phthalocyanine (TMPc) as probe molecule to study the SERS performance of our printed Au-NS structures.
A 0.5 mM concentrated solution of the Au32 nanoclusters (in hexane) is spin-coated onto a substrate of interest e.g. a Si/SiOx piece of a wafer to form a closed film (Fig. 1a and b). The writing is then performed on a home-built inverted confocal microscope, which is equipped with a 488 nm cw-laser (Toptica) and controlled by a pattern generator (HydraSpex) that synchronizes sample scanning with selective spot by spot laser illumination on the sample surface. Upon illumination the Au32 nanoclusters in the radiation sensitive ink are absorbing light and convert into elemental gold, which starts to agglomerate and forming bigger particles, mostly nanospheres. The sizes and distances of this single gold nanospheres (Au-NS) depend on thickness and concentration of the film and on the variable duration of the illumination (Fig. 1c). This leads to the arrangement of the Au-NS in a predefined manner with nm-precise positioning. In a following lift-off step (Fig. 1d) the unexposed thin film can be removed resulting in a clean wafer with the remaining Au-NS pattern. Afterwards a thin layer of perfluorinated cobalt phthalocyanine (CoPcF16) is deposited onto the Au-NS patterned silicon substrate (Fig. 1e). We choose CoPcF16 to trace the fluor signal in X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) measurements. The molecules will act as Raman scatterers to determine the optical properties of our proof-of-concept system for potential surface enhanced Raman scattering investigations (SERS, Fig. 1f). This samples are prepared on commercial finger electrode substrates, which work as recognition structure and allow fast orientation on the sample. Fig. 1g shows the optical micrograph of a rectangular printed pad consisting of gold nanospheres (Au-NS-pad), that was printed underneath a pre-existing gold electrode. The thin ink film is yet to be removed.
Under illumination with a wavelength of 633 nm, the luminescence image (Fig. 2a) shows three different areas, which can be distinguished by their brightness. The Si/SiOx-surface appears dark and shows only minor photoluminescence (PL) and almost no PL on the conventional gold electrodes (see Fig. 2a and black spectrum in Fig. 3f). In contrast to the other regions the laser written Au-NS pad clearly appears much brighter, where most of the signal intensity is caused by the CoPcF16 (see Fig. 3f, red spectrum). Fig. 2b–d display the SEM images of the pad, that were used to identify the nanospheres and to determine their size distribution. Naturally, most of the particles have spherical shapes with a few ones showing rod-like shapes and fused spheres. Their dimensions range from sub-10 nm to approx. 30 nm with an average size of 20.5 ± 7.2 nm and a maximal sphere-to-sphere distance of ≈50 nm. For the validation and measurement of the thickness of the evaporated CoPcF16 film grown on the substrate surface, we performed XPS with Al-Kα radiation (photon energy of 1486.6 eV). Applying the method by Seah and Dench,50 we utilized the intensity of the F 1s and Si 2s signals, considering their photoionization cross-sections,51 to assess the thickness of the molecular film. We observed a uniform sub-monolayer distribution of the molecules across the entire substrate.
Fig. 3e and f include the Raman spectroscopy analysis of the CoPcF16 molecule. The spectra were taken with an integration time of 10 ms and averaged over 10 frames. With an excitation at 532 nm (Fig. 3c) the Panda appears to have sharper features and the spectral intensity is dominated by a broad luminescence caused by PL emission of the Au nanospheres (Fig. 3e). The blue spectrum in Fig. 3a was taken from the surface of the Panda and shows the intense and broad PL signal from the Au-nanospheres and the Raman bands the CoPcF16 at 754 cm−1 and in the 1340–1550 cm−1 regime. The latter acts as a characteristic “fingerprint” for phthalocyanine molecules.52 The spectrum recorded on the Si/SiOx substrate shows only the prominent Raman peak of Si/SiOx at 520 nm and no Raman signal of the CoPcF16 is detected (Fig. 3d). However, by exciting the sample with a 633 nm laser, which is resonant to the LSPR of the Au-NS most of the signal is generated by surface enhanced Raman scattering (Fig. 3d) showing the distinctive vibrational bands of the CoPcF16 molecules and only a minor Pl background (Fig. 3e). The spectra in Fig. 3f reveal a detailed depiction of the CoPcF16 vibrational modes, as we obtain well-defined Raman peaks within a wide range. Additionally, to the Au-NS enhancement the excitation energy of 1.96 eV (633 nm) coincides with the HOMO–LUMO gap energy of the CoPcF16 (1.9 eV). The frequencies observed at 583, 742, 954, 1330, 1374, 1487 and 1538 cm−1 are in good accordance with literature,53 including reasonable shifts that derive from the influence of the fluorine atoms. The peaks at 1538, 1487, 954, 742, and 583 cm−1 can be assigned to the in-plane symmetric N
C stretching mode, benzene C–C stretch, macrocycle breathing, in-plane symmetric N-metal stretch and macrocycle breathing, respectively. For the repeated time, spectra observed outside the Au-NS-Panda just contain the silicon band at 520 cm−1.
We estimate our analytical Raman enhancement factor (AEF) as described by Le Ru et al.14
With (IC,SERS) as peak intensity, (NC,SERS) number of molecules responsible for the respective signal, (tC,SERS) integration time. Since no confocal Raman signal could be detected even after 5 minutes integration time, we take the noise level as an upper limit for the confocal Raman signal IC. As a further simplification we assume the number of molecules NC, equal to NSERS. Using for ISERS the intensity the Raman peak at 742 cm−1, we calculate a minimum enhancement factor of 106 for 633 nm and 104 to 105 for 532 nm. However, this is a very conservative approximation. Most likely the number of molecules within the hot spots will be much less than in the confocal focus and the intensity enhancement will be much higher.
For the reaction solution 3 mmol (1304 g) of nBu3PAuCl was dissolved in 60 ml of ethanol and a suspension of 3 mmol (0.114 g) NaBH4 in ethanol was added. After stirring for 1 h the solvent was removed under reduced pressure. The residual black solid was extracted with dichloromethane and layered with three times the amount of diethyl ether. After 1 week a gold mirror formed leaving a dark supernatant. The dark brown supernatant was filtered and concentrated under vacuum. After the solution was stored at −30 °C for a few days, crystals of Au32(nBu3P)12Cl8 formed (90 mg 12.6 μmol, 14%), that were used to prepare the ink.
Printing of the Au-NS patterns on Si/SiOx was performed via raster scanning on a home-built confocal microscope driven by a controller and pattern generator (HydraSpex HydraLabX1) with a piezoelectric stage (Physik Instrumente P-517.3CL), by exposing the area of interest to 488 nm laser radiation (cw, iBeam-Smart diode laser, Toptica Photonics). The excitation beam was focused onto the substrate with an air objective lens (Carl Zeiss, NA = 0.70). The applied printing method included full laser intensity (1.86 mW), 0.003 s exposure time and three pattern iterations. The position accuracy of our writing process is given by our hardware and only limited by the closed loop scanning stage. This stage has a capacitive sensor feedback with a repeatable position accuracy of 10 nm. Hence, even with multiple iterations our patters have only a max. error of 10 nm. The dimension of our smallest possible structures that can be written determined by the diffraction limit of the used objective and sample material. On glass we can use a high NA oil objective and reach λ/2 with ∼250 nm with air objectives on e.g., silicon the smallest patterns have sizes ∼300 nm, which has demonstrated in Geladari et al.47
Optical investigations were conducted using a home-built confocal microscope, equipped with a cw laser emitting radiation at 532 nm (100 μW for PL images and 22 mW for spectra, Coherent Sapphire) and at 633 nm (149 μW for PL images and 0.55 mW for spectra, Melles Griot 10-LHR-111). Photoluminescence images were acquired using an avalanche photodiode (APD, SPCM-AQR-14, PerkinElmer). For the SERS measurements, an UV-Vis-spectrometer (SP-2500i, Princeton Instruments) equipped with a charge-coupled device (CCD) camera (ProEM:512B+, Princeton Instruments) was used.
Deposition of CoPcF16 was done under ultra-high vacuum (UHV) conditions (base pressure of the deposition chamber 2 × 10−8 mbar) via molecular beam epitaxy with a home-build Knudsen cell. The molecules were placed in a crucible and deposited by resistively heating the cell to 390–400 °C. The temperature was adjusted till a constant deposition rate of 0.2–0.3 nm min−1 could be monitored by a quartz microbalance. XPS measurements were performed on a multichamber UHV system with a base pressure of 5 × 10−10 mbar. The analysis chamber is equipped with a monochromated Al Kα radiation source (XR 50 M, Specs) and a Phoibos 150 hemispherical photoelectron analyser (Specs). For calibration core-level peak positions of cleaned (Ar ion sputtering) gold (Au 4f7/2, 84 eV) and cupper (Cu 2p3/2) foils were used.
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