Control of plasmon emission and dynamics at the transition from classical to quantum coupling

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Abstract

With nanosecond radiative lifetimes, quenching dominates over enhancement for conventional fluorescence emitters near metal interfaces. We explore the fundamentally distinct behavior of photoluminescence (PL) with few-femtosecond radiative lifetimes of a coupled plasmonic emitter. Controlling the emitter-surface distance with subnanometer precision by combining atomic force and scanning tunneling distance control, we explore the unique behavior of plasmon dynamics at the transition from long-range classical resonant energy transfer to quantum coupling. Because of the ultrafast radiative plasmon emission, classical quenching is completely suppressed. Field-enhanced behavior dominates until the onset of quantum coupling dramatically reduces emission intensity and field enhancement, as verified in concomitant tip-enhanced Raman measurements. The entire distance behavior from tens of nanometers to subnanometers can be described using a phenomenological rate equation model and highlights the new degrees of freedom in radiation control enabled by an ultrafast radiative emitter near surfaces.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)5270-5275
Number of pages6
JournalNano Letters
Volume14
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 10 2014

Keywords

  • photoluminescence
  • Plasmonic emitter
  • quantum coupling
  • radiative lifetime
  • tunneling

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