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Harnessing Chemical Raman Enhancement for Understanding Organic Adsorbate Binding on Metal Surfaces

Authors :
Jeffrey Bokor
Hyuck Choo
Jeffrey B. Neaton
Ying S. Hu
Alexey T. Zayak
Stefano Cabrini
P. James Schuck
Daniel J. Gargas
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Chemical Society, 2012.

Abstract

Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) is a known approach for detecting trace amounts of molecular species. Whereas SERS measurements have focused on enhancing the signal for sensing trace amounts of a chemical moiety, understanding how the substrate alters molecular Raman spectra can enable optical probing of analyte binding chemistry. Here we examine binding of trans-1,2-two(4- pyridyl) ethylene (BPE) to Au surfaces and understand variations in experimental data that arise from differences in how the molecule binds to the substrate. Monitoring differences in the SERS as a function of incubation time, a period of several hours in our case, reveals that the number of BPE molecules that chemically binds with the Au substrate increases with time. In addition, we introduce a direct method of accessing relative chemical enhancement from experiments that is in quantitative agreement with theory. The ability to probe optically specific details of metal/molecule interfaces opens up possibilities for using SERS in chemical analysis.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d999ad4575c2a738dc8b1e61f9a7b260