Bulk-suppressed and surface-sensitive Raman scattering by transferable plasmonic membranes with irregular slot-shaped nanopores
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Published:2024-06-19
Issue:1
Volume:15
Page:
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ISSN:2041-1723
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Container-title:Nature Communications
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat Commun
Author:
Wyss Roman M.ORCID, Kewes Günter, Marabotti PietroORCID, Koepfli Stefan M., Schlichting Karl-Philipp, Parzefall MarkusORCID, Bonvin Eric, Sarott Martin F.ORCID, Trassin MorganORCID, Oezkent MaximilianORCID, Lu Chen-HsunORCID, Gradwohl Kevin-P.ORCID, Perrault ThomasORCID, Habibova Lala, Marcelli Giorgia, Giraldo Marcela, Vermant JanORCID, Novotny LukasORCID, Frimmer Martin, Weber Mads C.ORCID, Heeg SebastianORCID
Abstract
AbstractRaman spectroscopy enables the non-destructive characterization of chemical composition, crystallinity, defects, or strain in countless materials. However, the Raman response of surfaces or thin films is often weak and obscured by dominant bulk signals. Here we overcome this limitation by placing a transferable porous gold membrane, (PAuM) on the surface of interest. Slot-shaped nanopores in the membrane act as plasmonic antennas and enhance the Raman response of the surface or thin film underneath. Simultaneously, the PAuM suppresses the penetration of the excitation laser into the bulk, efficiently blocking its Raman signal. Using graphene as a model surface, we show that this method increases the surface-to-bulk Raman signal ratio by three orders of magnitude. We find that 90% of the Raman enhancement occurs within the top 2.5 nm of the material, demonstrating truly surface-sensitive Raman scattering. To validate our approach, we quantify the strain in a 12.5 nm thin Silicon film and analyze the surface of a LaNiO3 thin film. We observe a Raman mode splitting for the LaNiO3 surface-layer, which is spectroscopic evidence that the surface structure differs from the bulk. These results validate that PAuM gives direct access to Raman signatures of thin films and surfaces.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Einstein Stiftung Berlin
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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