Gating single-molecule fluorescence with electrons
Gating single-molecule fluorescence with electrons
Tip-enhanced photoluminescence (TEPL) measurements are performed with sub-nanometer spatial resolution on individual molecules decoupled from a metallic substrate by a thin NaCl layer. TEPL spectra reveal progressive fluorescence quenching with decreasing tip-molecule distance when electrons tunneling from the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope are injected at resonance with the molecular states. Rate equations based on a many-body model reveal that the luminescence quenching is due to a progressive population inversion between the ground neutral (S$_0$) and the ground charge ($D_0^-$) states of the molecule occurring when the current is raised. We demonstrate that both the bias voltage and the atomic-scale lateral position of the tip can be used to gate the molecular emission. Our approach can in principle be applied to any molecular system, providing unprecedented control over the fluorescence of a single molecule.
Anna Ros?awska、Guillaume Schull、Michelangelo Romeo、Katharina Kaiser、Fabrice Scheurer
物理学光电子技术生物物理学
Anna Ros?awska,Guillaume Schull,Michelangelo Romeo,Katharina Kaiser,Fabrice Scheurer.Gating single-molecule fluorescence with electrons[EB/OL].(2024-03-15)[2025-08-02].https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.10410.点此复制
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