We demonstrate the ppt-level single-step selective monitoring of the presence of mercury ions (Hg2+) dissolved in environmental water by plasmon-enhanced vibrational spectroscopy. We combined a nanogap-optimized mid-infrared plasmonic structure with mercury-binding DNA aptamers to monitor in-situ the spectral evolution of the vibrational signal of the DNA induced by the mercury binding. Here, we adopted single-stranded thiolated 15-base DNA oligonucleotides that are immobilized on the Au surface and show strong specificity to Hg2+. The mercury-associated distinct signal is located apart from the biomolecule-associated broad signals and is selectively characterized. For example, with natural water from Lake Kasumigaura (Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan), direct detection of Hg2+ with a concentration as low as 37 ppt (37 × 10-10%) was readily demonstrated, indicating the high potential of this simple method for environmental and chemical sensing of metallic species in aqueous solution.
CITATION STYLE
Hoang, C. V., Oyama, M., Saito, O., Aono, M., & Nagao, T. (2013). Monitoring the presence of ionic mercury in environmental water by plasmon-enhanced infrared spectroscopy. Scientific Reports, 3. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep01175
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