Practical Applications of Surface-Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS)
Applications | 2010 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
Surface-Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS) dramatically improves the sensitivity of Raman spectroscopy by exploiting plasmonic effects on roughened metal surfaces. This capability extends Raman to trace‐level and dilute samples (ppm to ppt) and supports applications in environmental monitoring, food safety, forensic analysis, and medical diagnostics.
This technical note describes the principles of SERS, evaluates enhancement performance using model analytes (trans-1,2-bis(4-pyridyl)ethylene and L-alanine), and examines key factors influencing signal quality and reproducibility.
The study compares colloidal and solid‐phase substrates prepared via Lee–Meisel (silver colloid) and Frens (gold colloid) methods. Samples are deposited or mixed with metal colloids and dried on microscope slides. Spectra are collected under controlled conditions to assess signal enhancements and surface interaction effects.
Key findings include:
SERS offers a transformative enhancement of Raman spectroscopy, enabling analysis of dilute and complex samples. Reliable performance requires careful substrate preparation, laser wavelength matching, and power optimization. Commercial solutions streamline adoption and expand SERS applications across research, QA/QC, and diagnostics.
RAMAN Spectroscopy, Microscopy
IndustriesMaterials Testing
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Importance of the topic
Surface-Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS) dramatically improves the sensitivity of Raman spectroscopy by exploiting plasmonic effects on roughened metal surfaces. This capability extends Raman to trace‐level and dilute samples (ppm to ppt) and supports applications in environmental monitoring, food safety, forensic analysis, and medical diagnostics.
Study objectives and overview
This technical note describes the principles of SERS, evaluates enhancement performance using model analytes (trans-1,2-bis(4-pyridyl)ethylene and L-alanine), and examines key factors influencing signal quality and reproducibility.
Methodology
The study compares colloidal and solid‐phase substrates prepared via Lee–Meisel (silver colloid) and Frens (gold colloid) methods. Samples are deposited or mixed with metal colloids and dried on microscope slides. Spectra are collected under controlled conditions to assess signal enhancements and surface interaction effects.
Used instrumentation
- Thermo Scientific DXR Raman Microscope
- Thermo Scientific DXR SmartRaman Spectrometer
- Multiple‐slide holder for automated sample positioning
- Laser wavelengths: 532 nm, 633 nm, and 780 nm with fine power control down to 0.1 mW
Main results and discussion
Key findings include:
- SERS substrates achieve enhancement factors up to 10^4–10^6 compared to standard Raman on plain slides.
- BPE on SERS surfaces exhibits sharp, intense peaks, whereas bulk Raman shows weak features.
- L-alanine spectra demonstrate peak shifts and intensity changes arising from surface adsorption and ionic form variation.
- Optimal laser‐substrate pairing (e.g., 633 nm on silver) delivers highest signal‐to‐noise and permits significantly lower laser power.
Benefits and practical applications
- Trace contaminant detection in water and food matrices
- Forensic evidence and biomolecular analysis
- Medical diagnostics for low‐concentration biomarkers
- Insight into molecular surface interactions and binding geometries
Future trends and opportunities
- Custom functionalization for selective analyte binding
- Sol‐gel and embedded nanoparticle substrates for robust sampling environments
- Integration with microfluidics and automated high‐throughput workflows
- Development of multiplex assays using advanced plasmonic nanostructures
Conclusion
SERS offers a transformative enhancement of Raman spectroscopy, enabling analysis of dilute and complex samples. Reliable performance requires careful substrate preparation, laser wavelength matching, and power optimization. Commercial solutions streamline adoption and expand SERS applications across research, QA/QC, and diagnostics.
References
- Kneipp K.; Moskovits M.; Kneipp H., Eds. Surface-Enhanced Raman Scattering: Physics and Applications; Topics in Applied Physics 103; Springer: New York, 2006.
- Lee P.C.; Meisel D. J. Phys. Chem. 1982, 86, 3391.
- Frens G. Nat. Phys. Sci. 1973, 241, 20.
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