Article,

Food Quality Monitor: Paper-Based Plasmonic Sensors Prepared Through Reversal Nanoimprinting for Rapid Detection of Biogenic Amine Odorants

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ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, 9 (20): 17306-17316 (2017)PMID: 28471650.
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b00115

Abstract

This paper describes the fabrication of paper-based plasmonic refractometric sensors through the embedding of metal nanoparticles (NPs) onto flexible papers using reversal nanoimprint lithography. The NP-embedded papers can serve as gas sensors for the detection of volatile biogenic amines (BAs) released from spoiled food. Commercial inkjet papers were employed as sensor substrates—their high reflectance (>80\%) and smooth surfaces (roughness: ca. 4.9 nm) providing significant optical signals for reflection-mode plasmonic refractometric sensing and high particle transfer efficiency, respectively; in addition, because inkjet papers have lightweight and are burnable and flexible, they are especially suitable for developing portable, disposable, cost-effective, eco-friendly sensing platforms. Solid silver NPs (SNPs), solid gold NPs (GNPs), and hollow Au–Ag alloyed NPs (HGNs) were immobilized on a solid mold and then transferred directly onto the softened paper surfaces. The particle number density and exposure height of the embedded NPs were dependent on two imprinting parameters: applied pressure and temperature. The optimal samples exhibited high particle transfer efficiency (ca. 85\%), a sufficient exposure surface area (ca. 50\% of particle surface area) presented to the target molecules, and a strong resonance reflectance dip for detection. Moreover, the HGN-embedded paper displayed a significant wavelength dip shift upon the spontaneous adsorption of BA vapors (e.g., Δλ = 33 nm for putrescine; Δλ = 24 nm for spermidine), indicating high refractometric sensitivity; in contrast, no visible spectroscopic responses were observed with respect to other possibly coexisting gases (e.g., air, N2, CO2, water vapor) during the food storage process, indicating high selectivity. Finally, the plasmonic sensing papers were used to monitor the freshness of a food product (salmon).

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