Maryam Aghili (21196414)Benjamin T. Hogan (21196417)Joshua P. Chamberland (21196420)Dominik P. J. Barz (8713458)Aristides Docoslis (1959715)
Surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) pushes the boundaries of Raman spectroscopy as an analytical technique, allowing improved sensitivity and high discriminatory ability in analyte detection. Here, we introduce a SERS substrate using reduced graphene oxide aerogels as scaffolds. Reduced graphene oxide aerogels are hydrophobic, electrically conductive, and easily formable, providing a versatile platform for silver dendritic nanostructure growth via electrochemical deposition. We show that the electrochemical growth conditions (applied voltage, reduction time) have a significant effect on both the morphology and coverage of the silver nanostructures, which in turn have a strong effect on the SERS performance of the substrate. The importance of Ag dendrite morphology to the SERS substrate’s performance is also confirmed by finite-difference time-domain simulations. Under silver growth conditions of 10 V applied voltage at 10 Hz for 120 min, we obtained a limit of detection of 3.16 × 10–5 ppm for thiram, which is lower than the testing requirements set by food and environmental regulatory agencies. Moreover, the substrates showed high silver coverage (85.6%), reproducibility (relative standard deviation ∼6% for substrates produced under the same conditions), and relative stability (∼20% change) of the obtained signal over one month. In view of their SERS capabilities and relative ease of preparation, we consider this new class of substrates a strong candidate for meeting detection and quantification challenges for a broad spectrum of analytes.
Maryam Aghili (21196414)Benjamin T. Hogan (21196417)Joshua P. Chamberland (21196420)Dominik P. J. Barz (8713458)Aristides Docoslis (1959715)
Maryam AghiliBenjamin T. HoganJoshua P. ChamberlandDominik P. J. BarzAristides Docoslis
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