Materials (Nov 2020)

SERS Effect on Spin-Coated Seeding of Tilted Au-ZnO Nanorods for Low-Cost Diagnosis

  • Miyeon Jue,
  • Chan-Gi Pack,
  • Seakhee Oh,
  • Bjorn Paulson,
  • Kwanhee Lee,
  • Jun Ki Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13235321
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 23
p. 5321

Abstract

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Uniformly parallel Au-coated ZnO nanorods have previously been shown to amplify local Raman signals, providing increased sensitivity to disease markers in the detection of inflammation and cancer. However, practical and cost-effective fabrication methods of substrates for surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) fail to produce highly uniform surfaces. Here, the feasibility of Raman enhancement on less-uniform substrates is assessed. ZnO nanorod structures were fabricated by hydrothermal synthesis, starting from spin-coated seed substrates. Following analysis, the nanostructures were coated with Au to create stochastically variant substrates. The non-uniformity of the fabricated Au-coated ZnO nanorod structures is confirmed morphologically by FE-SEM and structurally by X-ray diffraction, and characterized by the angular distributions of the nanorods. Monte Carlo finite element method simulations matching the measured angular distributions and separations predicted only moderate increases in the overall Raman enhancement with increasing uniformity. Highly variant substrates exhibited approximately 76% of the Raman enhancement of more uniform substrates in simulations and experiments. The findings suggest that, although highly inhomogeneous Au-coated ZnO nanorod substrates may not attain the same Raman enhancement as more uniform substrates, the relaxation of fabrication tolerances may be economically viable.

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