Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, Vol.460, 128-134, 2015
Plasmonic-polymer hybrid hollow microbeads for surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) ultradetection
Hybrid composites are known to add functionality to plasmonic nanomaterials. Although these substrates can be produced by common synthetic methods, the percentage of metal loaded into the functional material is usually small. Herein, we exploit a phase inversion precipitation method to incorporate large amounts of silver nanoparticles inside the polymeric matrix of polysulfone microbeads. The composite material combines the high SERS activity resulting from the plasmonic coupling of highly interacting nanoparticles and the ability to accumulate analytes of the polysulfone porous support. This allows for the quantitative SERS detection down to the nanomolar level, with a liner response that extends over an impressive concentration range of five orders of magnitude. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy;Plasmonic;Metallic nanoparticles;Hybrid materials;Polysulfone;Phase inversion precipitation;Hot-spots;Analyte accumulation;Microbeads;Ultradetection