Abstract

Solid supported 2D assembly of silver nanocubes was fabricated by Langmuir-Blodgett technique and employed to investigate its surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) and surface enhance fluorescence (SEF) activities by detecting Rh6G in solution of varied concentrations, that is, 10−12 M, 10−9 M, 10−6 M, and 10−3 M. SERS was detected from a nanomolar concentration of Rh6G whereas SEF was detected from a picomolar concentration. Further, the substrate was subjected to thermal annealing to fabricate plasmonic thin film. The formation of thin film was followed by monitoring its surface plasmon resonance spectra and atomic force microscopic images. It was observed that the characteristic spectral peaks of silver nanocubes merged into a broad spectral band as the annealing time was increased and the intensity of the band decreased with the formation of thin film. The obtained result implies that thermal annealing could be a simple approach to create nanoscale gaps in SERS substrate and to engineer continuous thin film from the assembly of discrete nanoparticles.

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