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One-Step, On-Site Chemical Printing of a 3D Plasmon-Coupled Silver Nanocoral Substrate toward SERS-Based POCT.

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Surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) with the advantages of high sensitivity, nondestructive analysis, and a unique fingerprint effect shows great potential in point-of-care testing (POCT). However, SERS faces challenges in rapidly… Click to show full abstract

Surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) with the advantages of high sensitivity, nondestructive analysis, and a unique fingerprint effect shows great potential in point-of-care testing (POCT). However, SERS faces challenges in rapidly constructing a substrate with high repeatability, homogeneity, and sensitivity, which are the key factors that restrict its practical applications. In this study, we propose a one-step chemical printing strategy for synthesizing a three-dimensional (3D) plasmon-coupled silver nanocoral (AgNC) substrate (only need about 5 min) without any pretreatments and complex instruments. The galvanic replacement between AgNO3 and Cu sheets will provide both Ag0 for the formation of silver nanostructures and Cu2+ for the polymerization of fish sperm DNA (FSDNA). The protection of AgNCs is facilitated by the crosslinked FSDNA, which can improve the stability of the substrate and promote the control of its coral-like morphology. The obtained substrate displays excellent capacity of signal enhancement due to the 3D plasmon coupling both between nanocoral tentacles and between nanocorals and Cu sheets as well. Therefore, the AgNC substrates display high activity (enhancement factor = 1.96 × 108) and uniformity (RSD < 6%). Food colorants have been widely used in various foods to improve their color, but the inevitable toxicity of colorants seriously threatens food safety. Therefore, the proposed AgNC substrates were used to directly quantify three kinds of weak-affinity food colorant molecules including Brilliant Blue, Allura Red, and Sunset Yellow assisted by the capture by cysteamine hydrochloride (CA), showing the detection limits (S/N = 3) of 0.053, 0.087, and 0.089 ppm, respectively. The SERS method has been further applied in the detection of the three kinds of food colorants in both complex food samples and urine with recoveries of 91-119%. The satisfactory detection results suggest that the facile preparation strategy of AgNC substrates will be widely used in SERS-based POCT to promote the development of food safety and on-site healthcare.

Keywords: food; one step; chemical printing; substrate; plasmon coupled

Journal Title: Analytical chemistry
Year Published: 2023

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