We synthesize a thin film composed of long carbyne chains terminated by gold
clusters and study its optical properties. The presence of gold particles
stabilizes longer chains and leads to their alignment. We show that the gold
clusters also act as a source of electron doping thus changing the intensity of
photoluminescence from quadratic dependence on the pumping intensity without
gold to linear with gold. We also observe that the excitation of the film at
the gold plasmon frequency causes the blue shift of photoluminescence and
estimate on the basis of this effect the minimum length of the carbyne chains.
The high degree of alignment of the gold-terminated carbyne chains results in
strongly anisotropic light absorption characterized by a distinctive cosine
dependence on the angle between the carbyne molecule and polarization plane of
the excitation. This paves the way for a new class of ultimately-thin
polarization sensitive emitters to be used in future integrated quantum
photonics devices.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure