A new nonlinear optical method is presented to detect proteins binding to a gold surface without using fluorescent-dye labeling. After exposure of the protein-binding surface to a gold nanosphere solution, the nanospheres are immobilized above a gold surface with a nanogap supported by the protein. The gold nanospheres immobilized on the gold surface show strong localized surface plasmon (LSP) resonance, and the formation of this structure results in a marked increase in the optical second harmonic (SH) activity of the gold surface arising from a large enhancement of the electric field localized adjacent to the nanospheres on the LSP resonance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhat we believe to be a new label-free multichannel biosensing platform is proposed. It is composed of surface-immobilized gold nanospheres (SIGNs) above a gold surface with a nanogap supported by a merocyanine self-assembled monolayer. The circular SIGN spots with a diameter of 120 microm were arrayed for multichannel biosensing on a glass slide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have investigated linear and nonlinear optical properties of surface immobilized gold nanospheres (SIGNs) above a gold surface with a gap distance of a few nanometers. The nanogap was supported by amine or merocyanine terminated self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of alkanethiolates. A large second-harmonic generation (SHG) was observed from the SIGN systems at localized surface plasmon resonance condition.
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