Single-step fabrication of hybrid germanium-gold/silver nanoentities by femtosecond laser ablation and applications in SERS-based sensing

Nanotechnology. 2023 Jul 19;34(40). doi: 10.1088/1361-6528/ace3c9.

Abstract

We present a simple, fast, and single-step approach for fabricating hybrid semiconductor-metal nanoentities through liquid-assisted ultrafast (∼50 fs, 1 kHz, 800 nm) laser ablation. Femtosecond (fs) ablation of Germanium (Ge) substrate was executed in (i) distilled water (ii) silver nitrate (AgNO3-3, 5, 10 mM) (iii) Chloroauric acid (HAuCl4-3, 5, 10 mM), yielding the formation of pure Ge, hybrid Ge-silver (Ag), Ge-gold (Au) nanostructures (NSs) and nanoparticles (NPs). The morphological features and corresponding elemental compositions of Ge, Ge-Ag, and Ge-Au NSs/NPs have been conscientiously studied using different characterization techniques. Most importantly, the deposition of Ag/Au NPs on the Ge substrate and their size variation were thoroughly investigated by changing the precursor concentration. By increasing the precursor concentration (from 3 mM to 10 mM), the deposited Au NPs and Ag NPs' size on the Ge nanostructured surface was increased from ∼46 nm to ∼100 nm and from ∼43 nm to ∼70 nm, respectively. Subsequently, the as-fabricated hybrid (Ge-Au/Ge-Ag) NSs were effectively utilized to detect diverse hazardous molecules (e.g. picric acid and thiram) via the technique of surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS). Our findings revealed that the hybrid SERS substrates achieved at 5 mM precursor concentration of Ag (denoted as Ge-5Ag) and Au (denoted as Ge-5Au) had demonstrated superior sensitivity with the enhancement factors of ∼2.5 × 104, 1.38 × 104(for PA), and ∼9.7 × 105and 9.2 × 104(for thiram), respectively. Interestingly, the Ge-5Ag substrate has exhibited ∼10.5 times higher SERS signals than the Ge-5Au substrate.

Keywords: SERS; explosives; femtosecond laser ablation; germanium (Ge); picric acid (PA); thiram.