101 research outputs found
Collective Fluorescence Enhancement In Nanoparticle Clusters
Many nanoscale systems are known to emit light intermittently under continuous illumination. In the fluorescence of single semiconductor nanoparticles, the distributions of bright and dark periods (\u27on\u27 and \u27off\u27 times) follow Levy statistics. Although fluorescence from single-quantum dots and from macroscopic quantum dot ensembles has been studied, there has been little study of fluorescence from small ensembles. Here we show that blinking nanorods (NRs) interact with each other in a cluster, and the interactions affect the blinking statistics. The on-times in the fluorescence of a NR cluster increase dramatically; in a cluster with N NRs, the maximum on-time increases by a factor of N or more compared with the combined signal from N well-separated NRs. Our study emphasizes the use of statistical properties in identifying the collective dynamics. The scaling of this interaction-induced increase of on-times with number of NRs reveals a novel collective effect at the nanoscale
A mesoscopic ring as a XNOR gate: An exact result
We describe XNOR gate response in a mesoscopic ring threaded by a magnetic
flux . The ring is attached symmetrically to two semi-infinite
one-dimensional metallic electrodes and two gate voltages, viz, and
, are applied in one arm of the ring which are treated as the inputs of
the XNOR gate. The calculations are based on the tight-binding model and the
Green's function method, which numerically compute the conductance-energy and
current-voltage characteristics as functions of the ring-to-electrode coupling
strength, magnetic flux and gate voltages. Our theoretical study shows that,
for a particular value of () (, the elementary
flux-quantum), a high output current (1) (in the logical sense) appears if both
the two inputs to the gate are the same, while if one but not both inputs are
high (1), a low output current (0) results. It clearly exhibits the XNOR gate
behavior and this aspect may be utilized in designing an electronic logic gate.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Amine-Gold Linked Single-Molecule Junctions: Experiment and Theory
The measured conductance distribution for single molecule benzenediamine-gold
junctions, based on 59,000 individual conductance traces recorded while
breaking a gold point contact in solution, has a clear peak at 0.0064 G
with a width of 40%. Conductance calculations based on density functional
theory (DFT) for 15 distinct junction geometries show a similar spread.
Differences in local structure have a limited influence on conductance because
the amine-Au bonding motif is well-defined and flexible. The average calculated
conductance (0.046 G) is seven times larger than experiment, suggesting
the importance of many-electron corrections beyond DFT
One-Pot Silver Nanoring Synthesis
Silver colloidal nanorings have been synthesized by reducing silver ions with NaBH4 in trisodium citrate buffers. pH increase, by addition of NaOH, was used to speed up reduction reaction. The UV–vis absorption spectra of resulting silver nanorings showed two peaks accounting for transverse and longitudinal surface plasmon resonance, at ≈400 nm, and between 600 and 700 nm, respectively. The shapes of these silver nanoparticles (nanorings) depended on AgNO3/NaBH4 ratio, pH and reaction temperature. Particles were analysed by transmission electron microscopy, scanning electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction. A reaction pathway is proposed to explain silver nanoring formation
Simultaneous measurements of electronic conduction and Raman response in molecular junctions
Electronic conduction through single molecules is affected by the molecular
electronic structure as well as by other information that is extremely
difficult to assess, such as bonding geometry and chemical environment. The
lack of an independent diagnostic technique has long hampered single-molecule
conductance studies. We report simultaneous measurement of the conductance and
the Raman spectra of nanoscale junctions used for single-molecule electronic
experiments. Blinking and spectral diffusion in the Raman response of both
para-mercaptoaniline and a fluorinated oligophenylyne ethynylene correlate in
time with changes in the electronic conductance. Finite difference time domain
calculations confirm that these correlations do not result from the conductance
modifying the Raman enhancement. Therefore, these observations strongly imply
that multimodal sensing of individual molecules is possible in these
mass-producible nanostructures.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures + supporting material of 15 pages, 10 figure
Signatures of Molecular Magnetism in Single-Molecule Transport Spectroscopy
Single-molecule transistors provide a unique experimental tool to investigate
the coupling between charge transport and the molecular degrees of freedom in
individual molecules. One interesting class of molecules for such experiments
are the single-molecule magnets, since the intramolecular exchange forces
present in these molecules should couple strongly to the spin of transport
electrons, thereby providing both new mechanisms for modulating electron flow
and also new means for probing nanoscale magnetic excitations. Here we report
single-molecule transistor measurements on devices incorporating Mn12
molecules. By studying the electron-tunneling spectrum as a function of
magnetic field, we are able to identify clear signatures of magnetic states and
their associated magnetic anisotropy. A comparison of the data to simulations
also suggests that electron flow can strongly enhance magnetic relaxation of
the magnetic molecule
Managing light polarization via plasmon–molecule interactions within an asymmetric metal nanoparticle trimer
The interaction of light with metal nanoparticles leads to novel phenomena mediated by surface plasmon excitations. In this article we use single molecules to characterize the interaction of surface plasmons with light, and show that such interaction can strongly modulate the polarization of the emitted light. The simplest nanostructures that enable such polarization modulation are asymmetric silver nanocrystal trimers, where individual Raman scattering molecules are located in the gap between two of the nanoparticles. The third particle breaks the dipolar symmetry of the two-particle junction, generating a wavelength-dependent polarization pattern. Indeed, the scattered light becomes elliptically polarized and its intensity pattern is rotated in the presence of the third particle. We use a combination of spectroscopic observations on single molecules, scanning electron microscope imaging, and generalized Mie theory calculations to provide a full picture of the effect of particles on the polarization of the emitted light. Furthermore, our theoretical analysis allows us to show that the observed phenomenon is very sensitive to the size of the trimer particles and their relative position, suggesting future means for precise control of light polarization on the nanoscale
- …