1 research outputs found
Novel Liposome-Based Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy (SERS) Substrate
Although
great strides have been made in recent years toward making
highly enhancing surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) substrates,
the biological compatibility of such substrates remains a crucial
problem. To address this issue, liposome-based SERS substrates have
been constructed in which the biological probe molecule is encapsulated
inside the aqueous liposome compartment, and metallic elements are
assembled using the liposome as a scaffold. Therefore, the probe molecule
is not in contact with the metallic surfaces. Herein we report our
initial characterization of these novel nanoparticle-on-mirror substrates,
both experimentally and theoretically, using finite-difference time-domain
calculations. The substrates are shown to be structurally stable to
laser irradiation, the liposome compartment does not rise above 45
°C, and they exhibit an analytical enhancement factor of 8 ×
10<sup>6</sup> for crystal violet encapsulated in 38 liposomes sandwiched
between a 40 nm planar gold mirror and 80 nm gold colloid