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February 1, 2010 - Volume 88, Number 05
- p. 30
- Appeared online January 29, 2010
Science & Technology Concentrates
More Science & Technology Concentrates
- Foil And Tape Serve Raman
- Pastelike silver dendrites generated on aluminum foil and transferred to Scotch tape serves as a substrate for SERS
- Magnetically Probed Protein Interactions
- The weak magnetosensitivity of photoinduced radical pairs can serve as a spectroscopic probe of protein-substrate interactions
- Aromatic Silicon Analog For Benzene
- Chemists synthesize the first aromatic hexasilabenzene isomer, and it has uneven “dismutational aromaticity”
- Newly Found Enzyme Degrades 8-Oxoguanine
- A deaminase that converts 8-oxoG to uric acid helps explain what might happen to 8-oxoG after it is excised during DNA repair
- Convenient Access To Thorium Chemistry
- A trio of new anhydrous complexes boosts thorium’s prospects in catalysis, materials science, and as a nuclear fuel
- Tiny Features Keep Termite Wings Dry
- Star-shaped microstructures and tiny hairs with nanoscale ridges wick away water to keep the insects flying
- Helical Polymers Under Stereocontrol
- Attaching chiral pendant groups to a polyphenylacetylene backbone allows reversible control over the polymer chain’s handedness
- Cascade Reaction To Crowded Carbons
- Palladium-mediated cut-and-paste reaction forges adjacent quaternary and tertiary stereocenters
Topics Covered
A simple method that generates a forest of silver dendrites on aluminum foil turns out to be ideal for creating material to use as a substrate in surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy, or SERS (J. Am. Chem. Soc., DOI: 10.1021/ja909806t). Since the 1970s, scientists have used metal surfaces to amplify the normally weak signals generated during Raman spectroscopy. Although the mechanism for the enhancement is still debated, researchers have produced numerous variations of substrates using different metals. But many of these processes are expensive and time-consuming. Roya Maboudian, Albert Gutés, and Carlo Carraro of the University of California, Berkeley, tried yet another approach: They soaked squares of aluminum foil in an AgF solution. After silver dendrites formed on the aluminum surface, they collected the pastelike silver and spread it on double-sided Scotch tape. The team used the novel substrate to obtain Raman spectra of 1,2-benzenedithiol, 1-phenylethyl mercaptan, and 2,2´-dithiodipyridine. The dendrite paste can be spread on any surface, the researchers note, making the process “an excellent candidate for analytical SERS control processes or for easy in-the-field measurements.”
- Chemical & Engineering News
- ISSN 0009-2347
- Copyright © 2011 American Chemical Society
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