Octopus-Inspired, Flexible Plasmonic Arrays for Multi-Modal Laser Sensing

Yuanchao Liu (Co-first Author), Yunchen Long (Co-first Author), Xiujuan Hu, Qing Yang, Xiaoyan Liu, Chaochao Sun, Annan Chen, Xiu Liang, Binbin Zhou*, Dangyuan Lei, Yangyang Li, Lianbo Guo*, Jian Lu*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

Abstract

The detection of organic and inorganic pollutants is critical due to their widespread environmental and health impacts. Although spectroscopic techniques offer substantial promise for pollutant analysis, their application is often hindered by challenges in sampling and analyzing contaminants on textured, rough, or non-directly accessible surfaces. Here, a flexible, octopus-inspired, hydrogel-based substrate with plasmonic suction cup arrays for multi-modal laser sensing (surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) and laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS)) is introduced. The micro-cavities within the suction cups create negative pressure, facilitating firm contact to complex surfaces with roughness depths (e.g., up to 300 µm) or non-directly detectable surfaces for efficient analyte capture. The suction cup arrays are fabricated by casting hydrogel into the 3D-printed mold, enabling precise and customizable designs that confirm to diverse surface profiles. Additionally, plasmonic materials (MXene and silver nanowires), enabling spectroscopic enhancement, are incorporated into polyvinyl alcohol to form the substrate. Then, molecular and atomic analytes are analyzed by SERS and LIBS, respectively, with promising accuracy and sensitivity. Overall, this flexible substrate enables precise detection on complex surfaces, offering transformative solutions in environmental monitoring, biomedical diagnostics, and cultural heritage preservation. © 2025 Wiley-VCH GmbH.
Original languageEnglish
Article number2505026
JournalAdvanced Functional Materials
DOIs
Publication statusOnline published - 13 May 2025

Funding

Y.L. and Y.L. contributed equally to this work. This research was financially supported by Open Project of Yunnan Precious Metals Laboratory Co., Ltd (No. YPML\u20102023050278); Research Grants Council of Hong Kong through an ANR\u2010RGC JRS grant (A\u2010CityU101/20); National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 62475128); Recruitment Project of Guangdong Province (No. 2023QN10X078); Guangdong Province Science and Technology Plan Project (2023B1212120008); Hong Kong Innovation and Technology Commission via the Hong Kong Branch of National Precious Metals Material Engineering Research Center.

Research Keywords

  • 3D-printed mold
  • laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy
  • microplastics
  • plasmonic
  • surface-enhanced raman scattering

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