“…At the same time, at great contents of an analyte, one competitive process is fluorescence, which substantially overlaps Raman scattering in intensity. A surface-enhanced spectroscopy of Raman scattering (SERS), which is also called the spectroscopy of giant combinational scattering (GCS), significantly levels up the disadvantages of the common CS-spectroscopy, being a powerful nondestructive method for studying substance, which acquires ever greater popularity in the recent decade [1]. The prospects of this method are caused by a number of unique parameters such as high rapidness and the possibility of carrying out registration in situ, minimal sample preparation or the absence of any need for sample preparation, and the possibility of detecting trace amounts of substance in various molecular conformations [2] up to the possibility of detecting individual molecules [3].…”