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Colloidal Multiscale Assembly via Photothermally Driven Convective Flow for Sensitive In‐Solution Plasmonic Detections

Small 2022 19 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jun‐Hee Park, Seung-Ki Lee, Hyunjoo Lee, Seungyeon Han, Tae Ho Kang, Dongchoul Kim, Taewook Kang, Inhee Choi

Summary

Researchers developed a facile method for producing three-dimensional multiscale assemblies of molecules, nanoparticles, and microparticles using photothermally driven convective flow, enabling sensitive in-solution surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) without chemical linkers or templates. The photothermally generated convection concentrated colloids and targets into a small probe volume, improving plasmonic detection sensitivity.

The assembly of metal nanoparticles and targets to be detected in a small light probe volume is essential for achieving sensitive in-solution surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). Such assemblies generally require either chemical linkers or templates to overcome the random diffusion of the colloids unless the aqueous sample is dried. Here, a facile method is reported to produce 3D multiscale assemblies of various colloids ranging from molecules and nanoparticles to microparticles for sensitive in-solution SERS detection without chemical linkers and templates by exploiting photothermally driven convective flow. The simulations suggest that colloids sub 100 nm in diameter can be assembled by photothermally driven convective flow regardless of density; the assembly of larger colloids up to several micrometers by convective flow is significant only if their density is close to that of water. Consistent with the simulation results, the authors confirm that the photothermally driven convective flow is mainly responsible for the observed coassembly of plasmonic gold nanorods with either smaller molecules or larger microparticles. It is further found that the coassembly with the plasmonic nanoantennae leads to dramatic Raman enhancements of molecules, microplastics, and microbes by up to fivefold of magnitude compared to those measured in solution without the coassembly.

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