State of the art in flexible SERS sensors toward label-free and onsite detection: from design to applications

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First Author:Xie Liping

Correspondence Author:Xia Wen,Du Yanan

Co author:Zeng Hedele,Zhu Jiaxin,Zhang Zelin, Hong-bin Sun

Journal:Nano Research

Issue:5

Volume:15

Impact Factor:9.5

DOI number:10.1007/s12274-021-4017-4

Affiliation of Author(s):College of Medicine and Biological Information Engineering, Northeastern University

Teaching and Research Group:物理化学

Place of Publication:PEOPLES R CHINA

Abstract:Surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) as a powerful non-invasive spectroscopic technique has been intensively used in bio/chemical sensing, enabling ultrasensitive detection of various analytes and high specificity with a fingerprint-like characteristic. Flexible SERS sensors conformally adapting to nonplanar surfaces and allowing swab-sampling or in-situ detection of analytes, which are not achievable for rigid SERS sensors, greatly meet the demand of onsite and real-time diagnostics. However, the rational design and fabrication of flexible SERS-based sensors for point-of-care diagnostics aiming to simultaneously achieve extremely high sensitivity, stability, and good signal reproducibility remain many challenges. We present a state-of-the-art review of the flexible SERS sensors. Attentions are devoted to engineering plasmonic substrates for improving the performance of flexible SERS devices. Strategies of constructing the flexible SERS sensors toward point-of-care detection are investigated in depth. Advanced algorithms assisting the SERS data process are also presented for intelligently distinguishing the species and contents of analytes. The promising applications of flexible SERS sensors in medical diagnostics, environmental analyses, food safety, and forensic science are displayed. The flexible SERS devices serving as powerful analytical tools shed new light on the in-situ and point-of-care detection of real-world analytes in a convenient, facile, and non-destructive manner, and especially are conceivable to serve as next-generation wearable sensors for healthcare.

Key Words:surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS),flexible sensor,point of care,swab-sampling,algorithms

Document Code:WOS:000740193400001

Discipline:Natural Science

First-Level Discipline:Chemistry

Page Number:4374-4394

ISSN No.:1998-0124

Translation or Not:no