Quenching of Quantum Dot Emission by Fluorescent Gold
Clusters: What It Does and Does Not Share with the Förster
Formalism
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Abstract
Understanding the interactions that
control the energy transfer
between dyes, or luminescent quantum dots (QDs), and gold nanoparticles
still has several unanswered questions. In this study we probed these
interactions using a unique model where CdSe-ZnS QDs were coupled
to fluorescent gold nanoclusters (AuNCs). Steady-state and time-resolved
fluorescence measurements were used to investigate the effects of
spectral overlap and separation distance on the quenching of QD photoemission
in these assemblies, using three different size QDs with distinct
emission spectra and a variable length polyethylene glycol bridge.
We found that the QD photoluminescence quenching efficiency depends
on the spectral overlap and separation distance, with larger quenching
efficiencies than what would be expected for a QD-dye pair with similar
overlap. Moreover, despite the large losses in QD PL, we found no
resonance enhancement in the cluster emission for any of the sample
configurations used. These results indicate that the mechanism driving
the quenching by metal clusters shares an important feature (namely
dependence on the spectral overlap) with the Förster dipole–dipole
coupling at the heart of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)
and widely validated for dye-dye and QD-dye assemblies. They also
prove that the energy losses induced by metal nanostructures are governed
by a process that is different from the Förster mechanism