Web Date: May 21, 2013
Researchers Study Insoluble Dyes On Artifacts
Analytical
Chemistry: New sampling method for surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy
extends the range of materials that can be studied by the technique
By
Dye Detection
A new approach to a common spectroscopic technique
identified the dyes embedded within these leather trappings of a
3,000-year-old Egyptian chariot.
Credit: The Metropolitan Museum of Art
To study the composition of fragile, ancient artifacts, scientists
often turn to surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS), a noninvasive
technique that can identify low levels of small organic molecules, such
as dyes. But current SERS methods don’t work with some oily or otherwise
insoluble materials. Now researchers report a laser vaporization method that allows analysis of previously SERS-incompatible materials (Anal. Chem. 2013, DOI: 10.1021/ac400440c).
In a typical SERS experiment, scientists dissolve their sample in a
solution containing gold or silver nanoparticles so that the sample
molecules adsorb onto the nanoparticles. When the researchers shine
laser light on the particles, the metal surfaces greatly amplify the
characteristic signals produced by the excited molecules. Based on these
signals, the scientists can identify the compounds and measure their
concentrations.
It’s hard to predict how each sample will react with the
nanoparticles, says Pablo S. Londero, a cultural heritage scientist at
the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in New York City. “You never know what an artist put into a material,” he says.
What’s more, many materials are insoluble or don’t adsorb well to the
metal surfaces. For example, Londero and his colleague Marco Leona were
studying dyed leather from an ancient Egyptian chariot. The dyes are
embedded within the leather’s collagen matrix, so it’s tricky to prepare
a sample for a traditional SERS analysis.
The researchers wondered if the solution to their problem was to
first vaporize the samples. They knew that a laser pulse can blast a
pinpoint of material from a surface into the air without harming or
heating the surrounding material, thus protecting the integrity of the
artifact during analysis. Also, vaporized material could more readily
adsorb to a metal surface, allowing for SERS.
After some fine-tuning of the idea, Londero, Leona, and collaborator John R. Lombardi of The City College of New York came up with a SERS method that takes about 15 minutes.
They slide a sample into a small vacuum chamber mounted under a
microscope. After pumping the air out of the chamber, they use the
microscope to choose a part of the sample to hit with an intense laser
pulse. The laser vaporizes a few micrometers of the targeted material,
which deposits onto a thin film of silver nanoparticles attached just
above the sample. The scientists then shine another laser on the silver
to record the characteristic signals produced by the material.
The scientists tried out their technique on the dyes embedded in the
3,000-year-old Egyptian leather. Based on the clear spectra produced for
the sample, the team confirmed that the pigment is madder lake, dye
from the madder plant (Rubia) combined with a metal that helps it
bind to the leather. Ancient Egyptians were among the first people to
create pigment from the madder plant.
The whole setup is quite clever, says Renato Zenobi, an analytical chemist at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich.
He likes that the sample vaporizes directly onto the metal surfaces,
keeping the whole experiment within one sample holder. But the greatest
advantage, he notes, is that the technique produces spectra of
completely insoluble materials generally out of reach with typical SERS
methods.
- Chemical & Engineering News
- ISSN 0009-2347
- Copyright © 2013 American Chemical Society
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