Expand this Topic clickable element to expand a topic
Skip to content
Optica Publishing Group
  • Applied Spectroscopy
  • Vol. 61,
  • Issue 10,
  • pp. 1116-1122
  • (2007)

Multiplexed Microfluidic Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy

Not Accessible

Your library or personal account may give you access

Abstract

Over the past few decades, surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) has garnered respect as an analytical technique with significant chemical and biological applications. SERS is important for the life sciences because it can provide trace level detection, a high level of structural information, and enhanced chemical detection. However, creating and successfully implementing a sensitive, reproducible, and robust SERS active substrate continues to be a challenging task. Herein, we report a novel method for SERS that is based upon using multiplexed microfluidics (MMFs) in a polydimethylsiloxane platform to perform parallel, high throughput, and sensitive detection/identification of single or various analytes under easily manipulated conditions. A facile passive pumping method is used to deliver Ag colloids and analytes into the channels where SERS measurements are done under nondestructive flowing conditions. With this approach, SERS signal reproducibility is found to be better than 7%. Utilizing a very high numerical aperture microscope objective with a confocal-based Raman spectrometer, high sensitivity is achieved. Moreover, the long working distance of this objective coupled with an appreciable channel depth obviates normal alignment issues expected with translational multiplexing. Rapid evaluation of the effects of anion activators and the type of colloid employed on SERS performance are used to demonstrate the efficiency and applicability of the MMF approach. SERS spectra of various pesticides were also obtained. Calibration curves of crystal violet (non-resonant enhanced) and Mitoxantrone (resonant enhanced) were generated, and the major SERS bands of these analytes were observable down to concentrations in the low nM and sub-pM ranges, respectively. While conventional random morphology colloids were used in most of these studies, unique cubic nanoparticles of silver were synthesized with different sizes and studied using visible wavelength optical extinction spectrometry, scanning electron microscopy, and the MMF-SERS approach.

PDF Article
More Like This
Ultrasensitive enhanced Raman spectroscopy by hybrid surface-enhanced and interference-enhanced Raman scattering with metal-insulator-metal structures

Kaipeng Liu, Tiancheng Gong, Yunfei Luo, Weijie Kong, Weisheng Yue, Changtao Wang, and Xiangang Luo
Opt. Express 31(10) 15848-15863 (2023)

Two-photon fabrication of three-dimensional silver microstructures in microfluidic channels for volumetric surface-enhanced Raman scattering detection

Monica Focsan, Ana Maria Craciun, Simion Astilean, and Patrice L. Baldeck
Opt. Mater. Express 6(5) 1587-1593 (2016)

Optofluidic in-fiber integrated surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy detection based on a hollow optical fiber with a suspended core

Danheng Gao, Xinghua Yang, Pingping Teng, Zhihai Liu, Jun Yang, Depeng Kong, Jianzhong Zhang, Meng Luo, Zhanao Li, Fengjun Tian, and Libo Yuan
Opt. Lett. 44(21) 5173-5176 (2019)

Cited By

You do not have subscription access to this journal. Cited by links are available to subscribers only. You may subscribe either as an Optica member, or as an authorized user of your institution.

Contact your librarian or system administrator
or
Login to access Optica Member Subscription

Select as filters


Select Topics Cancel
© Copyright 2024 | Optica Publishing Group. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies.