Artículos de revistas
SERS mapping in Langmuir-Blodgett films and single-molecule detection
Fecha
2013Registro en:
Applied Spectroscopy, Frederick : Society for Applied Spectroscopy, v. 67, n. 5, p. 563-569, 2013
0003-7028
10.1366/12-06909
Autor
Aoki, Pedro H. B
Carreon, Eduardo G. E
Volpati, Diogo
Shimabukuro, Milton H
Constantino, Carlos J. L
Aroca, Ricardo F
Oliveira Junior, Osvaldo Novais de
Paulovich, Fernando Vieira
Institución
Resumen
Plasmon-enhanced spectroscopic techniques have expanded single-molecule detection (SMD) and are revolutionizing areas such as bio-imaging and single-cell manipulation. Surface-enhanced (resonance) Raman scattering (SERS or SERRS) combines high sensitivity with molecularfingerprint information at the single-molecule level. Spectra originating from single-molecule SERS experiments are rare events, which occur only if a single molecule is located in a hot-spot zone. In this spot, the molecule is selectively exposed to a significant enhancement associated with a high, local electromagnetic field in the plasmonic substrate. Here, we report an SMD study with an electrostatic approach in which a Langmuir film of a phospholipid with anionic polar head groups (PO4 ) was doped with cationic methylene blue (MB), creating a homogeneous, two-dimensional distribution of dyes in the monolayer. The number of dyes in the probed area of the Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) film coating the Ag nanostructures established a regime in which single-molecule events were observed, with the identification based on direct matching of the observed spectrum at each point of the mapping with a reference spectrum for the MB molecule. In addition, advanced fitting techniques were tested with the data obtained from micro-Raman mapping, thus achieving real-time processing to extract the MB single-molecule spectra.