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Abstract Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) harnesses the confinement of light into metallic nanoscale hotspots to achieve highly sensitive label-free molecular detection that can be applied for a broad range of sensing applications. However, challenges related to irreversible analyte binding, substrate reproducibility, fouling, and degradation hinder its widespread adoption. Here we show how in-situ electrochemical regeneration can rapidly and precisely reform the nanogap hotspots to enable the continuous reuse of gold nanoparticle monolayers for SERS. Applying an oxidising potential of +1.5 V (vs Ag/AgCl) for 10 s strips a broad range of adsorbates from the nanogaps and forms a metastable oxide layer of few-monolayer thickness. Subsequent application of a reducing potential of −0.80 V for 5 s in the presence of a nanogap-stabilising molecular scaffold, cucurbit5uril, reproducibly regenerates the optimal plasmonic properties with SERS enhancement factors ≈10 6 . The regeneration of the nanogap hotspots allows these SERS substrates to be reused over multiple cycles, demonstrating ≈5% relative standard deviation over at least 30 cycles of analyte detection and regeneration. Such continuous and reliable SERS-based flow analysis accesses diverse applications from environmental monitoring to medical diagnostics.
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Sarah May Sibug‐Torres
University of Cambridge
David‐Benjamin Grys
University of Cambridge
Gyeongwon Kang
Kangwon National University
Nature Communications
University of Cambridge
Kangwon National University
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Sibug-Torres et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e75683b6db6435876ce2fa — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46097-y