Publications by authors named "Suzanne Joiret"

A rotaxane scaffold incorporating two dithiolane anchoring units for the modification of gold surfaces has been functionalized with multiple copies of a redox unit, namely ferrocene. Surface modification has been first assessed at the single molecule level by atomic force microscopy (AFM) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) imaging, while tip enhanced Raman spectroscopy (TERS) provided the local vibrational signature of the ferrocenyl subunits of the rotaxanes grafted onto the gold surface. Finally, oxidation of the redox moieties within a rotaxane scaffold grafted onto gold microelectrodes has been investigated by ultrafast cyclic voltammetry.

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Herein we present new substrates for surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). The synthesis of colloidal nanoparticles through an organometallic route allowed us to obtain gold, silver, or copper nanoparticles with well-controlled shapes and sizes (5-12 nm in diameter). The organization of these nanoparticles into large-scale 3D superlattices produces a very large number of "hot spots" at the origin of the signal enhancement.

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In the quest for analytical tools which enable the characterization of materials at the nanoscale and under the condition of their operation (in situ, operando), the emerging tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (TERS) now enters the spotlight. We demonstrate in this work that a TERS tip can be functionalized and partially insulated to be used as a microelectrode enabling electrochemical substrate enhanced Raman sectroscopy (EC-SERS) at a single hotspot. This "SERS at a tip" experiment enables one to capture the electrochemical transformation of a molecular layer self-assembled on a tapered gold microelectrode.

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Cylindrical micelles prepared in aqueous solutions from cationic surfactants octadecyl trimethylammonium (OTA+) or cetyltrimethylammonium (CTA+) and parachlorobenzoate (PCB) counterion were successfully imaged after evaporation of water using tapping mode atomic force microscopy (TM-AFM) onto very smooth gold and glass substrates. With the help of the obtained topography AFM images, it was shown that the micellar structures are preserved on gold substrates after evaporation of the solvent despite the new set of stresses due mainly to capillary forces and dehydration. The influence of the substrate on the resulting micellar morphology observed in air was investigated for these two materials: cylindrical micelles were evidenced as loosely adherent on gold surface in the presence of parachlorobenzoate (PCB) and identical, geometrically speaking, to those known to exist in aqueous solutions.

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