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1.
Anal Methods ; 16(21): 3385-3391, 2024 May 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38751361

RESUMEN

Cellulose is a sustainable material capable of forming optically active nanoarrays on its surface. We created a composite of cellulose acetate (CA) and graphene oxide (GO), by mixing GO (0.1 mg mL-1) into CA. This was then imprinted with nanoscale surface features that form Bragg-like modes in resonance with the excitation laser when a thin layer of silver is vapor deposited onto the surface of the substrate. The addition of GO leads to improved surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) signal strengths, obtaining an average SERS signal increase of 1.4-fold following the inclusion of GO. The combination of photonic and electromagnetic effects with charge transfer-based processes that support the SERS chemical mechanism and the possible presence of electromagnetic hot spots from the roughened surface results in an enhanced SERS signal strength when GO is added. This work shows the potential for nanoimprinted graphene oxide/cellulose acetate composites as flexible sensor platforms to detect target molecules.

2.
ACS Omega ; 8(7): 6318-6324, 2023 Feb 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36844575

RESUMEN

Nanocomposites comprising plasmon active metal nanostructures and semiconductors have been used to control the charge states in the metal to support catalytic activity. In this context dichalcogenides when combined with metal oxides offer the potential to control charge states in plasmonic nanomaterials. Using a model plasmonic mediated oxidation reaction p-amino thiophenol ↔ p-nitrophenol, we show that through the introduction of transition metal dichalcogenide nanomaterial, reaction outcomes can be influenced, achieved through controlling the occurrence of the reaction intermediate dimercaptoazobenzene by opening new electron transfer routes in a semiconductor-plasmonic system. This study demonstrates the ability to control plasmonic reactions by carefully controlling the choice of semiconductors.

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