JOURNAL ARTICLE

Vertically Aligned Gold Nanorod Monolayer on Arbitrary Substrates: Self-Assembly and Femtomolar Detection of Food Contaminants

Abstract

Public attention to the food scandals raises an urgent need to develop effective and reliable methods to detect food contaminants. The current prevailing detections are primarily based upon liquid chromatography, mass spectroscopy, or colorimetric methods, which usually require sophisticated and time-consuming steps or sample preparation. Herein, we develop a facile strategy to assemble the vertically aligned monolayer of Au nanorods with a nominal 0.8 nm gap distance and demonstrate their applications in the rapid detection of plasticizers and melamine contamination at femtomolar level by surface-enhanced Raman scattering spectroscopy (SERS). The SERS signals of plasticizers are sensitive down to 0.9 fM concentrations in orange juices. It is the lowest detection limit reported to date, which is 7 orders of magnitude lower than the standard of United States (6 ppb). The highly organized vertical arrays generate the reproducible "SERS-active sites" and can be achieved on arbitrary substrates, ranging from silicon, gallium nitride, glass to flexible poly(ethylene naphthalate) substrates.

Keywords:
Detection limit Nanorod Monolayer Materials science Plasticizer Melamine Nanotechnology Contamination Raman spectroscopy Raman scattering Analytical Chemistry (journal) Chemistry Chromatography Optics

Metrics

235
Cited By
10.42
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
48
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Gold and Silver Nanoparticles Synthesis and Applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Melamine detection and toxicity
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Food Science
Biosensors and Analytical Detection
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
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