The obtained Ag nanocubes were then used to prepare Ag nanocubes/polyelectrolyte/Au film sandwich structures. When the Ag nanocube sol was directly dropcast onto the polyelectrolyte/Au film surface, the nanocubes were mostly aggregated in the coffee rings after solvent evaporation, as manifested in laser scanning confocal microscopic Raman measurements (Fig. S1 in Supporting information) [
25-
27]. A more uniform distribution of the nanocubes could be obtained by adding ethanol into the sol before dropcasting on the polyelectrolyte surface (Fig. S2 in Supporting information) [
28], due to the reduced surface tension and rapid evaporation of ethanol at room temperature [
29-
31]. However, the spacing between neighboring nanocubes generally remains too big to achieve apparent LSP-LSP coupling, which compromised the enhancement factor and LOQ. Interestingly, the addition of an ethanolic solution of 1-dodecanethiol, instead of pure ethanol, into the Ag nanocube sol before dropcasting onto the polyelectrolyte layer resulted in the formation of a highly ordered edge-to-edge monolayer after solvent evaporation (
Fig. 2a) [
32], as manifested clearly in SEM measurements where the edge-to-edge spacing was estimated to be
ca. 1 nm (
Fig. 2b). The SERS performance of the resulting Ag nanocubes/polyelectrolyte/Au film sandwich structures was then evaluated by using CV as the probe molecule. To evaluate the LOD and LOQ of the sandwich substrate,
Fig. 2c shows the SERS profiles of CV at the concentration of 10
-8 mol/L collected from 15 repeated measurements on three substrates prepared in the same manner. The CV concentration was lowered to 10
-9, 10
-10 and 10
-11 mol/L, and the corresponding SERS profiles were depicted in
Fig. 2d. In general, relative standard deviations (RSD) of the intensity of the four main vibrational peaks less than 20% is needed for quantitative analysis by SERS [
33,
34]. Significantly, from Fig. S3 (Supporting information), one can also see that the four Raman peaks all showed a consistent variation trend of the intensity in 45 acquisitions on the three monolayer substrates. This means that any of the peaks can be used for the quantitative analysis of the target molecule (CV in the present measurement), which is particularly important when multiple molecules co-adsorb onto the substrate surface and some of the spectral features overlap. One can see that apparent SERS signals remained well resolved at concentration above 10
-10 mol/L, with the RSD values (
Fig. 2e) lower than 20%, suggesting an LOQ of 10
-10 mol/L, which is lower than that of traditional Ag nanocubes-based sandwich substrates prepared by simple dropcast (10
-8 mol/L) and coffee ring Ag nanocube substrates (5×10
-8 mol/L) [
11,
12]. This suggests a remarkable performance of the sandwich substrate with good point-to-point and sample-to-sample repeatability. Such a compact, ordered structure may lead to strong LSP-LSP coupling, as manifested in FDTD simulation (
Fig. 3). From the FDTD simulations, one can see that the LSP-LSP resonance enhances the electromagnetic field in the gap (1 nm) between neighboring nanocubes (
Fig. 3). As linearly polarized light (1 V/m) was used along the X direction, there was no LSP-LSP resonance along the Y direction in the tetramer (
Fig. 3d). That is why the electric field strength of the tetramer is less than that of the trimer. In general, the LSP-LSP effect becomes intensified with an increasing number of nanocubes in the assembly. In contrast to the substrate prepared by the addition of pure ethanol (Fig. S4 in Supporting information), the LOD of the substrate prepared with the addition of an ethanolic solution of 1-docanethiol was found to be only
ca. 10
-11 mol/L for CV (
Fig. 4a).