Optimization of SERS Tag Intensity, Binding Footprint,
and Emittance
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Abstract
Nanoparticle surface enhanced Raman
scattering (SERS) tags have
attracted interest as labels for use in a variety of applications,
including biomolecular assays. An obstacle to progress in this area
is a lack of standardized approaches to compare the brightness of
different SERS tags within and between laboratories. Here we present
an approach based on binding of SERS tags to beads with known binding
capacities that allows evaluation of the average intensity, the relative
binding footprint of particles in a SERS tag preparation, and the
size-normalized intensity or emittance. We tested this on four different
SERS tag compositions and show that aggregated gold nanorods produce
SERS tags that are 2β4 times brighter than relatively more
monodisperse nanorods, but that the aggregated nanorods are also correspondingly
larger, which may negate the intensity if steric hindrance limits
the number of tags bound to a target. By contrast, SERS tags prepared
from smaller gold nanorods coated with a silver shell produce SERS
tags that are 2β3 times brighter, on a size-normalized basis,
than the Au nanorod-based tags, resulting in labels with improved
performance in SERS-based image and flow cytometry assays. SERS tags
based on red-resonant Ag plates showed similarly bright signals and
small footprint. This approach to evaluating SERS tag brightness is
general, uses readily available reagents and instruments, and should
be suitable for interlab comparisons of SERS tag brightness