Seeing Is Not Necessarily Believing: Is the Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy Signal Really from the Target?
Si-Qi PanPing LuoJia ChenTairui WuBin XuFushan ChenDe-Yin WuBin RenGuo-Kun LiuJian-Wei XiePengxiang XuZhong-Qun TianPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2023)
Reagent purity is crucial to experimental research, considering that the ignorance of ultratrace impurities may induce wrong conclusions in either revealing the reaction nature or qualifying the target. Specifically, in the field of surface science, the strong interaction between the impurity and the surface will bring a non-negligible negative effect. Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) is a highly surface-sensitive technique, providing fingerprint identification and near-single molecule sensitivity. In the SERS analysis of trace chloromethyl diethyl phosphate (DECMP), we figured out that the SERS performance of DECMP is significantly distorted by the trace impurities from DECMP. With the aid of gas chromatography-based techniques, one strongly interfering impurity (2,2-dichloro- N , N -dimethylacetamide), the byproduct during the synthesis of DECMP, was confirmed. Furthermore, the nonignorable interference of impurities on the SERS measurement of NaBr, NaI, or sulfadiazine was also observed. The generality ignited us to refresh and consolidate the guideline for the reliable SERS qualitative analysis, by which the potential misleading brought by ultratrace impurities, especially those strongly adsorbed on Au or Ag surfaces, could be well excluded.
Keyphrases
- raman spectroscopy
- single molecule
- sensitive detection
- gold nanoparticles
- gas chromatography
- mass spectrometry
- heavy metals
- systematic review
- quantum dots
- public health
- high resolution
- staphylococcus aureus
- escherichia coli
- living cells
- human health
- solid phase extraction
- high speed
- high resolution mass spectrometry
- bioinformatics analysis