29 research outputs found
photoluminescence of a single quantum emitter in a strongly inhomogeneous chemical environment
A comprehensive photoluminescence study of defect centers in single SiO2 nanoparticles provides new insight into the complex photo-physics of single quantum emitters embedded into a random chemical environment
Electrodynamic coupling of electric dipole emitters to a fluctuating mode density within a nano-cavity
We investigate the impact of rotational diffusion on the electrodynamic
coupling of fluorescent dye molecules (oscillating electric dipoles) to a
tunable planar metallic nanocavity. Fast rotational diffusion of the molecules
leads to a rapidly fluctuating mode density of the electromagnetic field along
the molecules' dipole axis, which significantly changes their coupling to the
field as compared to the opposite limit of fixed dipole orientation. We derive
a theoretical treatment of the problem and present experimental results for
rhodamine 6G molecules in cavities filled with low and high viscosity liquids.
The derived theory and presented experimental method is a powerful tool for
determining absolute quantum yield values of fluorescence.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted by Physical Review Letter
Three-Dimensional Orientation of Single Molecules in a Tunable Optical lambda/2 Microresonator
A tightly focused radially polarized laser beam forms an unusual bimodal held distribution in an optical lambda/2-microresonator. We use a single-molecule dipole to probe the vector properties of this field distribution by tuning the resonator length with nanometer precision. Comparing calculated and experimental excitation patterns provides the three-dimensional orientation of the single-molecule dipole in the microresonator
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Excitation and Emission Transition Dipoles of Type-II Semiconductor Nanorods.
The mechanisms of exciton generation and recombination in semiconductor nanocrystals are crucial to the understanding of their photophysics and for their application in nearly all fields. While many studies have been focused on type-I heterojunction nanocrystals, the photophysics of type-II nanorods, where the hole is located in the core and the electron is located in the shell of the nanorod, remain largely unexplored. In this work, by scanning single nanorods through the focal spot of radially and azimuthally polarized laser beams and by comparing the measured excitation patterns with a theoretical model, we determine the dimensionality of the excitation transition dipole of single type-II nanorods. Additionally, by recording defocused patterns of the emission of the same particles, we measure their emission transition dipoles. The combination of these techniques allows us to unambiguously deduce the dimensionality and orientation of both excitation and emission transition dipoles of single type-II semiconductor nanorods. The results show that in contrast to previously studied quantum emitters, the particles possess a 3D degenerate excitation and a fixed linear emission transition dipole