3,329 research outputs found
Electron-Hole Asymmetry in Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes Probed by Direct Observation of Transverse Quasi-Dark Excitons
We studied the asymmetry between valence and conduction bands in
single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) through the direct observation of
spin-singlet transverse dark excitons using polarized photoluminescence
excitation spectroscopy. The intrinsic electron-hole (e-h) asymmetry lifts the
degeneracy of the transverse exciton wavefunctions at two equivalent K and K'
valleys in momentum space, which gives finite oscillator strength to transverse
dark exciton states. Chirality-dependent spectral weight transfer to transverse
dark states was clearly observed, indicating that the degree of the e-h
asymmetry depends on the specific nanotube structure. Based on comparison
between theoretical and experimental results, we evaluated the band asymmetry
parameters in graphene and various carbon nanotube structures.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Quantitative analysis of directional spontaneous emission spectra from light sources in photonic crystals
We have performed angle-resolved measurements of spontaneous-emission spectra
from laser dyes and quantum dots in opal and inverse opal photonic crystals.
Pronounced directional dependencies of the emission spectra are observed:
angular ranges of strongly reduced emission adjoin with angular ranges of
enhanced emission. It appears that emission from embedded light sources is
affected both by the periodicity and by the structural imperfections of the
crystals: the photons are Bragg diffracted by lattice planes and scattered by
unavoidable structural disorder. Using a model comprising diffuse light
transport and photonic band structure, we quantitatively explain the
directional emission spectra. This provides detailed understanding of the
transport of spontaneously emitted light in real photonic crystals, which is
essential in the interpretation of quantum-optics in photonic band-gap crystals
and for applications wherein directional emission and total emission power are
controlled.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, corrected pdf, inserted new referenc
Fluorophore Coupling to Internal Modes of Bragg Gratings
Multilayer structures with two dielectrics having different optical constants and no structural features in the x−y plane can display photonic band gaps (PBGs) and are called one-dimensional photonic crystals (1DPCs). If the top layer thickness is carefully selected, the electromagnetic energy can be trapped at the top surface. These highly enhanced fields are called Bloch surface waves (BSWs). The BSW resonance angles are sensitive to the dielectric constant above the top dielectric layer. As a result, BSW structures have been used for surface plasmon resonance-like measurements without the use of a metal film. However, the emphasis on surface-localized BSWs has resulted in limited interest in fluorophore interactions with other optical modes of 1DPCs or Bragg gratings without the different thickness top layer. Herein, three different fluorescent probes were used to cover the short, center, and long wavelengths of the PBG. We demonstrate efficient coupling of fluorophores to both the BSW and internal modes (IMs) of a 1DPC. Coupling to the IM is expected to be low because of the micron-scale distances between the fluorophores and IM, which exists inside the Bragg gratings. At different wavelengths or observation angles, the IM-coupled emission (IMCE) can occur with the first three modes of the multilayer. This coupling is not dependent on a BSW mode. IMCE was also observed for a monolayer of fluorophore-labeled protein. IMCE enables sensitive detection of surface-bound fluorophores. Applications are anticipated in high sensitivity detection and super-resolution imaging
Annealed Silver-Island Films for Applications in Metal-Enhanced Fluorescence: Interpretation in Terms of Radiating Plasmons
The effects of thermally annealed silver island films have been studied with regard to their potential applicability in applications of metal-enhanced fluorescence, an emerging tool in nano-biotechnology. Silver island films were thermally annealed between 75 and 250°C for several hours. As a function of both time and annealing temperature, the surface plasmon band at ≈420 nm both diminished and was blue shifted. These changes in plasmon resonance have been characterized using both absorption measurements, as well as topographically using Atomic Force Microscopy. Subsequently, the net changes in plasmon absorption are interpreted as the silver island films becoming spherical and growing in height, as well as an increased spacing between the particles. Interestingly, when the annealed surfaces are coated with a fluorescein-labeled protein, significant enhancements in fluorescence are osbserved, scaling with annealing temperature and time. These observations strongly support our recent hypothesis that the extent of metal-enhanced fluorescence is due to the ability of surface plasmons to radiate coupled fluorophore fluorescence. Given that the extinction spectrum of the silvered films is comprised of both an absorption and scattering component, and that these components are proportional to the diameter cubed and to the sixth power, respectively, then larger structures are expected to have a greater scattering contribution to their extinction spectrum and, therefore, more efficiently radiate coupled fluorophore emission. Subsequently, we have been able to correlate our increases in fluorescence emission with an increased particle size, providing strong experiment evidence for our recently reported metal-enhanced fluorescence, facilitated by radiating plasmons hypothesis
Photonic mode density effects on single-molecule fluorescence blinking
We investigated the influence of the photonic mode density (PMD) on the
triplet dynamics of individual chromophores on a dielectric interface by
comparing their response in the presence and absence of a nearby gold film.
Lifetimes of the excited singlet state were evaluated in ordet to measure
directly the PMD at the molecules position. Triplet state lifetimes were
simultaneously determined by statistical analysis of the detection time of the
fluorescence photons. The observed singlet decay rates are in agreement with
the predicted PMD for molecules with different orientations. The triplet decay
rate is modified in a fashion correlated to the singlet decay rate. These
results show that PMD engineering can lead to an important suppression of the
fluorescence, introducing a novel aspect of the physical mechanism to enhance
fluorescence intensity in PMD-enhancing systems such as plasmonic devices
Steady-State Probe-Partitioning FRET: A Simple and Robust Tool for the Study of Membrane Phase Behavior
An experimental strategy has been developed specifically for the study of
composition-dependent phase behavior in multi-component artificial membranes.
The strategy is based on steady-state measurements of fluorescence resonance
energy transfer between freely diffusing membrane probe populations, and it is
well suited for the rapid generation of large data sets. Presented in this
paper are the basic principles that guide the experiment's design, the
derivation of an underlying mathematical model that serves to interpret the
data, and experimental results that confirm the model's predictive power.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Cross-polarized optical absorption of single-walled nanotubes probed by polarized photoluminescence excitation spectroscopy
Cross-polarized absorption peaks of isolated single-walled carbon nanotubes
were observed by a polarized photoluminescence excitation (PLE) spectroscopy.
Using a simple theory for PL anisotropy, the observed PLE spectra are
decomposed into 'pure' components of the photoexcitation for incident light
polarized parallel and perpendicular to the SWNT axis. For several (n, m)
SWNTs, distinct peaks corresponding to perpendicular excitation were observed.
The measured transition energies for perpendicular excitations were
blue-shifted compared to the qualitative values predicted within a
single-particle theory. The results indicate a smaller exciton binding energy
for perpendicular excitations than for parallel excitations.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Studying Flow Close to an Interface by Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence Cross Correlation Spectroscopy: Quantitative Data Analysis
Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence Cross Correlation Spectroscopy
(TIR-FCCS) has recently (S. Yordanov et al., Optics Express 17, 21149 (2009))
been established as an experimental method to probe hydrodynamic flows near
surfaces, on length scales of tens of nanometers. Its main advantage is that
fluorescence only occurs for tracer particles close to the surface, thus
resulting in high sensitivity. However, the measured correlation functions only
provide rather indirect information about the flow parameters of interest, such
as the shear rate and the slip length. In the present paper, we show how to
combine detailed and fairly realistic theoretical modeling of the phenomena by
Brownian Dynamics simulations with accurate measurements of the correlation
functions, in order to establish a quantitative method to retrieve the flow
properties from the experiments. Firstly, Brownian Dynamics is used to sample
highly accurate correlation functions for a fixed set of model parameters.
Secondly, these parameters are varied systematically by means of an
importance-sampling Monte Carlo procedure in order to fit the experiments. This
provides the optimum parameter values together with their statistical error
bars. The approach is well suited for massively parallel computers, which
allows us to do the data analysis within moderate computing times. The method
is applied to flow near a hydrophilic surface, where the slip length is
observed to be smaller than 10nm, and, within the limitations of the
experiments and the model, indistinguishable from zero.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figure
Properties of the mechanosensitive channel MscS pore revealed by tryptophan scanning mutagenesis
Funding This work was supported by a Wellcome Trust Programme grant [092552/A/10/Z awarded to I.R.B., S.M., J. H. Naismith (University of St Andrews, St Andrews, U.K.), and S. J. Conway (University of Oxford, Oxford, U.K.)] (T.R. and M.D.E.), by a BBSRC grant (A.R.) [BB/H017917/1 awarded to I.R.B., J. H. Naismith, and O. Schiemann (University of St Andrews)], by a Leverhulme Emeritus Fellowship (EM-2012-060\2), and by a CEMI grant to I.R.B. from the California Institute of Technology. The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013 FP7/2007-2011) under Grant PITN-GA-2011-289384 (FP7-PEOPLE-2011-ITN NICHE) (H.G.) (awarded to S.M.).Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Microscopic theory of surface-enhanced Raman scattering in noble-metal nanoparticles
We present a microscopic model for surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS)
from molecules adsorbed on small noble-metal nanoparticles. In the absence of
direct overlap of molecular orbitals and electronic states in the metal, the
main enhancement source is the strong electric field of the surface plasmon
resonance in a nanoparticle acting on a molecule near the surface. In small
particles, the electromagnetic enhancement is strongly modified by quantum-size
effects. We show that, in nanometer-sized particles, SERS magnitude is
determined by a competition between several quantum-size effects such as the
Landau damping of surface plasmon resonance and reduced screening near the
nanoparticle surface. Using time-dependent local density approximation, we
calculate spatial distribution of local fields near the surface and enhancement
factor for different nanoparticles sizes.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures. Considerably extended final versio
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