We report on ultrasensitive detection of dangerous trace elements in food and water by elaborating reusable, crystalline silicon surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) substrates via femtosecond laser processing. Limits of detection (LoDs) of 10–7μg/L for microcystin-LR (a waterborne algal toxin) and 10–12M for malachite green (a banned aquaculture additive) are achieved by the fabricated substrates with experimental results closely matching the predictions of finite-element simulations. Interestingly, substrates fabricated in ambient air exhibit an order-of-magnitude higher SERS signal intensity than those produced under vacuum, evidencing an important influence of the processing conditions. The signal enhancement arises from synergistic electromagnetic effects: (1) subwavelength inter-ripple cavities induce intense field confinement, (2) laser-induced nanoscale roughness from nanoparticle redeposition creates additional field localization sites, and (3) Au nanoparticle decoration establishes hybrid plasmonic coupling via particle-substrate and interparticle interactions, generating gradient-distributed 3D hotspots with simulated enhancement factors (EFs) > 1010. SERS mapping demonstrates high signal uniformity across the platform, while also revealing distinct intensity variations between regions with differing surface roughness modulated by processing conditions. Our experimental findings validate a simple and effective strategy for food safety and environmental monitoring with laser-fabricated SERS substrates, also highlighting a critical influence of the processing environment on their final sensitivity.

Ultrasensitive Food and Water Sensing by Recyclable, Femtosecond Laser-Structured Surfaces

Valadan, Mohammadhassan;
2025-01-01

Abstract

We report on ultrasensitive detection of dangerous trace elements in food and water by elaborating reusable, crystalline silicon surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) substrates via femtosecond laser processing. Limits of detection (LoDs) of 10–7μg/L for microcystin-LR (a waterborne algal toxin) and 10–12M for malachite green (a banned aquaculture additive) are achieved by the fabricated substrates with experimental results closely matching the predictions of finite-element simulations. Interestingly, substrates fabricated in ambient air exhibit an order-of-magnitude higher SERS signal intensity than those produced under vacuum, evidencing an important influence of the processing conditions. The signal enhancement arises from synergistic electromagnetic effects: (1) subwavelength inter-ripple cavities induce intense field confinement, (2) laser-induced nanoscale roughness from nanoparticle redeposition creates additional field localization sites, and (3) Au nanoparticle decoration establishes hybrid plasmonic coupling via particle-substrate and interparticle interactions, generating gradient-distributed 3D hotspots with simulated enhancement factors (EFs) > 1010. SERS mapping demonstrates high signal uniformity across the platform, while also revealing distinct intensity variations between regions with differing surface roughness modulated by processing conditions. Our experimental findings validate a simple and effective strategy for food safety and environmental monitoring with laser-fabricated SERS substrates, also highlighting a critical influence of the processing environment on their final sensitivity.
2025
electromagnetic field enhancement
femtosecond laser surface engineering
food safety rapid screening
ultrasensitive and reusable SERS platform
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12572/34725
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
social impact