4.5 Article

Fabrication of a Biocompatible Mica/Gold Surface for Tip-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy

Journal

CHEMPHYSCHEM
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages 188-193

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cphc.201901002

Keywords

biocompatible surface; biological imaging; chemical imaging; DNA; tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation, National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure, NNCI [ECCS-1542015]
  2. National Institute of Health (NIH), National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) [R35G-M127151]

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Tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (TERS) is a promising technique for structural studies of biological systems and biomolecules, owing to its ability to provide a chemical fingerprint with sub-diffraction-limit spatial resolution. This application of TERS has thus far been limited, due to difficulties in generating high field enhancements while maintaining biocompatibility. The high sensitivity achievable through TERS arises from the excitation of a localized surface plasmon resonance in a noble metal atomic force microscope (AFM) tip, which in combination with a metallic surface can produce huge enhancements in the local optical field. However, metals have poor biocompatibility, potentially introducing difficulties in characterizing native structure and conformation in biomolecules, whereas biocompatible surfaces have weak optical field enhancements. Herein, a novel, biocompatible, highly enhancing surface is designed and fabricated based on few-monolayer mica flakes, mechanically exfoliated on a metal surface. These surfaces allow the formation of coupled plasmon enhancements for TERS imaging, while maintaining the biocompatibility and atomic flatness of the mica surface for high resolution AFM. The capability of these substrates for TERS is confirmed numerically and experimentally. We demonstrate up to five orders of magnitude improvement in TERS signals over conventional mica surfaces, expanding the sensitivity of TERS to a wide range of non-resonant biomolecules with weak Raman cross-sections. The increase in sensitivity obtained through this approach also enables the collection of nanoscale spectra with short integration times, improving hyperspectral mapping for these applications. These mica/metal surfaces therefore have the potential to revolutionize spectromicroscopy of complex, heterogeneous biological systems such as DNA and protein complexes.

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