Benefiting from the electromagnetic enhancement of noble metal nanoparticles (NPs) and the capture ability of organic frameworks, plasmonic metal-organic framework (MOF) structures have greatly promoted the development of gas detection… Click to show full abstract
Benefiting from the electromagnetic enhancement of noble metal nanoparticles (NPs) and the capture ability of organic frameworks, plasmonic metal-organic framework (MOF) structures have greatly promoted the development of gas detection by surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). In those detections, the kinetic process of gaseous molecules in plasmonic-MOF structures has a great influence on SERS spectra, which is still lacking intensive investigation in previous reports. In this work, the kinetic processes of gaseous thiophenol compounds (TPC) in the plasmonic Zeolitic Imidazolate Framework (Ag@ZIF) core-shell NPs are studied by SERS spectra. The experimental data demonstrate that the SERS intensities of gaseous TPC could be enhanced once more in an H2 mixed gas environment with different functional groups of TPC. Further results reveal that the two-step enhancement of SERS intensities is not only related to the thicknesses of the MOF shell but also affected by the ambient mixed gas. To understand this novel phenomenon, the binding energy between the gaseous molecule and ZIF is calculated based on first-principles computation. In combination with the plasmonic properties of the Ag core, a molecular collision model is introduced here to show the distribution of gaseous TPC molecules in ZIF, which could be responsible for this interesting two-step enhancement of SERS intensities. Furthermore, the H2 assisted kinetic process of gaseous p-aminothiophenol (PATP) is also analyzed by the classical pseudo-first-order kinetic model, which is consistent with our experimental SERS data. Our work not only reveals the novel phenomenon of plasmonic-MOF structures to improve the gas detection by SERS spectra but also enriches the understanding of the microcosmic process of gaseous molecules in the mixed gas environment to optimize MOF structures for gas capture and storage.
               
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