Publication | Open Access
Microporous Multiresonant Plasmonic Meshes by Hierarchical Micro–Nanoimprinting for Bio‐Interfaced SERS Imaging and Nonlinear Nano‐Optics
30
Citations
63
References
2022
Year
EngineeringMicroporous Polymeric MeshesSurface-enhanced Raman ScatteringBiomedical EngineeringHierarchical Micro–nanoimprintingMaterials FabricationBioimagingHybrid MaterialsBiophysicsNanophotonicsPlasmonic MaterialThird‐harmonic GenerationNanotechnologyNanomanufacturingPhotonic MaterialsBiophotonicsOptical SensorsPlasmonicsBio‐interfaced Sers ImagingBiomedical DiagnosticsMicrofabricationApplied PhysicsNonlinear Nano‐opticsNanofabricationPlasmonic Devices
Abstract Microporous mesh plasmonic devices have the potential to combine the biocompatibility of microporous polymeric meshes with the capabilities of plasmonic nanostructures to enhance nanoscale light–matter interactions for bio‐interfaced optical sensing and actuation. However, scalable integration of dense and uniformly structured plasmonic hotspot arrays with microporous polymeric meshes remains challenging due to the processing incompatibility of conventional nanofabrication methods with flexible microporous substrates. Here, scalable nanofabrication of microporous multiresonant plasmonic meshes (MMPMs) is achieved via a hierarchical micro‐/nanoimprint lithography approach using dissolvable polymeric templates. It is demonstrated that MMPMs can serve as broadband nonlinear nanoplasmonic devices to generate second‐harmonic generation, third‐harmonic generation, and upconversion photoluminescence signals with multiresonant plasmonic enhancement under fs pulse excitation. Moreover, MMPMs are employed and explored as bio‐interfaced surface‐enhanced Raman spectroscopy mesh sensors to enable in situ spatiotemporal molecular profiling of bacterial biofilm activity. Microporous mesh plasmonic devices open exciting avenues for bio‐interfaced optical sensing and actuation applications, such as inflammation‐free epidermal sensors in conformal contact with skin, combined tissue‐engineering and biosensing scaffolds for in vitro 3D cell culture models, and minimally invasive implantable probes for long‐term disease diagnostics and therapeutics.
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