Abstract

We introduce a surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS)-functionalized, gold nanoparticle (GNP)-deposited paper strip capable of label-free biofluid sensing for the early detection of infectious eye diseases. The GNP biosensing paper strip was fabricated by the direct synthesis and deposition of GNPs on wax-divided hydrophilic areas of a permeable porous substrate through a facile, power-free synthesizable, and highly reproducible successive ionic layer absorption and reaction (SILAR) technique. To maximize localized surface plasmon resonance-generated SERS activity, the concentration of the reactive solution and number of SILAR cycles were optimized by controlling the size and gap distance of GNPs and verified by computational modeling with geometrical hypotheses of Gaussian-estimated metallic nanoparticles. The responses of our SERS-functionalized GNP paper strip to Raman intensities exhibited an enhancement factor of 7.8 × 10(8), high reproducibility (relative standard deviation of 7.5%), and 1 pM 2-naphthalenethiol highly sensitive detection limit with a correlation coefficient of 0.99, achieved by optimized SILAR conditions including a 10/10 mM/mM HAuCl4/NaBH4 concentration and six SILAR cycles. The SERS-functionalized GNP paper is supported by a multivariate statistics-preprocessed machine learning-judged bioclassification system to provide excellent label-free chemical structure sensitivity for identifying infectious keratoconjunctivitis. The power-free synthesizable fabrication, label-free, rapid analysis, and high sensitivity feature of the SILAR-fabricated SERS-functionalized GNP biosensing paper strip makes it an excellent alternative in point-of-care applications for the early detection of various infectious diseases.

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