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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 137(40): 12764-7, 2015 Oct 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26402244

ABSTRACT

Photoswitchable fluorescent proteins (PS-FPs) open grand new opportunities in biological imaging. Through optical manipulation of FP emission, we demonstrate that dual-laser modulated synchronously amplified fluorescence image recovery (DM-SAFIRe) improves signal contrast in high background through unambiguous demodulation and is linear in relative fluorophore abundance at different points in the cell. The unique bright-to-dark state interconversion rates of each PS-FP not only enables discrimination of different, yet spectrally indistinguishable FPs, but also allows signal rejection of diffusing relative to bound forms of the same PS-FP, rsFastLime. Adding to the sensitivity gains realized from rejecting non-modulatable background, the selective signal recovery of immobilized vs diffusing intracellular rsFastLime suggests that DM-SAFIRe can detect weak protein-protein interactions that are normally obscured by large fractions of unbound FPs.


Subject(s)
Eye Proteins/chemistry , Luminescent Proteins/chemistry
2.
Acc Chem Res ; 47(5): 1545-54, 2014 May 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24725021

ABSTRACT

Fluorescence microscopy and detection have become indispensible for understanding organization and dynamics in biological systems. Novel fluorophores with improved brightness, photostability, and biocompatibility continue to fuel further advances but often rely on having minimal background. The visualization of interactions in very high biological background, especially for proteins or bound complexes at very low copy numbers, remains a primary challenge. Instead of focusing on molecular brightness of fluorophores, we have adapted the principles of high-sensitivity absorption spectroscopy to improve the sensitivity and signal discrimination in fluorescence bioimaging. Utilizing very long wavelength transient absorptions of kinetically trapped dark states, we employ molecular modulation schemes that do not simultaneously modulate the background fluorescence. This improves the sensitivity and ease of implementation over high-energy photoswitch-based recovery schemes, as no internal dye reference or nanoparticle-based fluorophores are needed to separate the desired signals from background. In this Account, we describe the selection process for and identification of fluorophores that enable optically modulated fluorescence to decrease obscuring background. Differing from thermally stable photoswitches using higher-energy secondary lasers, coillumination at very low energies depopulates transient dark states, dynamically altering the fluorescence and giving characteristic modulation time scales for each modulatable emitter. This process is termed synchronously amplified fluorescence image recovery (SAFIRe) microscopy. By understanding and optically controlling the dye photophysics, we selectively modulate desired fluorophore signals independent of all autofluorescent background. This shifts the fluorescence of interest to unique detection frequencies with nearly shot-noise-limited detection, as no background signals are collected. Although the fluorescence brightness is improved slightly, SAFIRe yields up to 100-fold improved signal visibility by essentially removing obscuring, unmodulated background (Richards, C. I.; J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2009, 131, 4619). While SAFIRe exhibits a wide, linear dynamic range, we have demonstrated single-molecule signal recovery buried within 200 nM obscuring dye. In addition to enabling signal recovery through background reduction, each dye exhibits a characteristic modulation frequency indicative of its photophysical dynamics. Thus, these characteristic time scales offer opportunities not only to expand the dimensionality of fluorescence imaging by using dark-state lifetimes but also to distinguish the dynamics of subpopulations on the basis of photophysical versus diffusional time scales, even within modulatable populations. The continued development of modulation for signal recovery and observation of biological dynamics holds great promise for studying a range of transient biological phenomena in natural environments. Through the development of a wide range of fluorescent proteins, organic dyes, and inorganic emitters that exhibit significant dark-state populations under steady-state illumination, we can drastically expand the applicability of fluorescence imaging to probe lower-abundance complexes and their dynamics.


Subject(s)
Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Spectrometry, Fluorescence/methods , Algorithms , Animals , Diagnostic Imaging , Humans
3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 135(44): 16410-7, 2013 Nov 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24099419

ABSTRACT

Blue fluorescent proteins (BFPs) offer visualization of protein location and behavior, but often suffer from high autofluorescent background and poor signal discrimination. Through dual-laser excitation of bright and photoinduced dark states, mutations to the residues surrounding the BFP chromophore enable long-wavelength optical modulation of BFP emission. Such dark state engineering enables violet-excited blue emission to be increased upon lower energy, green coillumination. Turning this green coillumination on and off at a specific frequency dynamically modulates collected blue fluorescence without generating additional background. Interpreted as transient photoconversion between neutral cis and anionic trans chromophoric forms, mutations tune photoisomerization and ground state tautomerizations to enable long-wavelength depopulation of the millisecond-lived, spectrally shifted dark states. Single mutations to the tyrosine-based blue fluorescent protein T203V/S205V exhibit enhanced modulation depth and varied frequency. Importantly, analogous single point mutations in the nonmodulatable BFP, mKalama1, creates a modulatable variant. Building modulatable BFPs offers opportunities for improved BFP signal discrimination vs background, greatly enhancing their utility.


Subject(s)
Luminescent Proteins/chemistry , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Luminescent Proteins/genetics , Luminescent Proteins/isolation & purification , Mice , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Models, Molecular , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , NIH 3T3 Cells , Optical Phenomena
4.
J Phys Chem A ; 117(39): 9501-9, 2013 Oct 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23692258

ABSTRACT

Optically modulated fluorescence from ∼140 nM Cy5 is visualized when embedded up to 6 mm within skin tissue mimicking phantoms, even in the presence of overwhelming background fluorescence and scatter. Experimental and finite element analysis (FEA)-based computational models yield excellent agreement in signal levels and predict biocompatible temperature changes. Using synchronously amplified fluorescence image recovery (SAFIRe), dual-laser excitation (primary laser: λ = 594 nm, 0.29 kW/cm(2); secondary laser: λ = 710 nm, 5.9 kW/cm(2), intensity-modulated at 100 Hz) simultaneously excites fluorescence and dynamically optically reverses the dark state buildup of primary laser-excited Cy5 molecules. As the modulated secondary laser both directly modulates Cy5 emission and is of lower energy than the collected Cy5 fluorescence, modulated Cy5 fluorescence in phantoms is free of obscuring background emission. The modulated fluorescence emission due to the secondary laser was recovered by Fourier transformation, yielding a specific and unique signature of the introduced fluorophores, with largely background-free detection, at excitation intensities close to the maximum permissible exposure (MPE) for skin. Experimental and computational models agree to within 8%, validating the computational model. As modulated fluorescence depends on the presence of both lasers, depth information as a function of focal position is also readily obtained from recovered modulated signal strength.


Subject(s)
Carbocyanines/chemistry , Fluorescence , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Phantoms, Imaging , Alginates/chemistry , Algorithms , Computer Simulation , Finite Element Analysis , Fourier Analysis , Glucuronic Acid/chemistry , Hexuronic Acids/chemistry , Humans , Lasers , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Optics and Photonics , Polystyrenes/chemistry , Skin , Talc/chemistry , Temperature , Xanthenes/chemistry
5.
Chemphyschem ; 13(4): 1023-9, 2012 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22086764

ABSTRACT

Fluorescence modulation offers the opportunity to detect low-concentration fluorophore signals within high background. Applicable from the single-molecule to bulk levels, we demonstrate long-wavelength optical depopulation of dark states that otherwise limit Cy5 fluorescence intensity. By modulated excitation of a long-wavelength Cy5 transient absorption, we dynamically modulate Cy5 emission. The frequency dependence enables specification of the dark-state timescales enabling optical-demodulation-based signal recovery from high background. These dual-laser illumination schemes for high-sensitivity fluorescence-signal recovery easily improve signal-to-noise ratios by well over an order of magnitude, largely by discrimination against background. Previously limited to very specialized dyes, our utilization of long-lived dark states in Cy5 enables selective detection of this very common single-molecule and bulk fluorophore. Although, in principle, the "dark state" can arise from any photoinduced process, we demonstrate that cis-trans photoisomerization, with its unique transient absorption and lifetime enables this sensitivity boosting, long-wavelength modulation to occur in Cy5. Such studies underscore the need for transient absorption studies on common fluorophores to extend the impact of fluorescence modulation for high-sensitivity fluorescence imaging in a much wider array of applications.


Subject(s)
Carbocyanines/chemistry , Isomerism , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Xanthenes/chemistry
6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 132(18): 6318-23, 2010 May 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20397664

ABSTRACT

Fluorescence resonance energy transfer is utilized to engineer donor photophysics for facile signal amplification and selective fluorescence recovery from high background. This is generalized such that many different fluorophores can be used in optical modulation schemes to drastically improve fluorescence imaging sensitivity. Dynamic, simultaneous, and direct excitation of the acceptor brightens and optically modulates higher energy donor emission. The externally imposed modulation waveform enables selective donor fluorescence extraction through demodulation. By incorporating an acceptor with significant, spectrally shifted, dark-state population, necessary excitation intensities are quite low and agree well with simulated enhancements. Enhancement versus modulation frequency directly yields dark-state lifetimes in a simple ensemble measurement. Using the long-lived Cy5 dark state in conjunction with Cy3 donors, we demonstrate image extraction from a large background to yield >>10-fold sensitivity improvements through synchronously amplified fluorescence image recovery (SAFIRe).


Subject(s)
Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer , Molecular Imaging/methods , Optical Phenomena , Base Sequence , Carbocyanines/metabolism , DNA/genetics , DNA/metabolism , Inverted Repeat Sequences
7.
J Am Chem Soc ; 131(13): 4619-21, 2009 Apr 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19284790

ABSTRACT

Fluorescence imaging in biological sciences is hindered by significant depth-dependent signal attenuation and highly fluorescent backgrounds. We have developed optically modulated near-IR-emitting few-atom Ag nanodots that are selectively and dynamically photobrightened upon simultaneous excitation with a secondary laser, enabling high-sensitivity image extraction to reveal only the demodulated fluorophores. Image demodulation is demonstrated in high-background environments to extract weak signals from completely obscuring background emission.


Subject(s)
Carbocyanines/chemistry , Gold/chemistry , Nanotubes/chemistry , Animals , Cytological Techniques , Diagnostic Imaging , Fluorescence , Mice , NIH 3T3 Cells , Optics and Photonics , Photochemistry
8.
J Am Chem Soc ; 130(35): 11602-3, 2008 Sep 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18686957

ABSTRACT

Water-soluble ssDNA-encapsulated Ag clusters exhibit large two-photon cross sections reaching 50 000 GM, with high quantum yields in the red and near-IR. Three distinct, spectrally pure, several atom clusters emitting at 660, 680, or 710 nm have been created with two-photon cross sections rivaling those of much larger water-soluble semiconductor quantum dots. Their stability, biocompatibility, and small size offer the promise of nontoxic, sensitive high-resolution biological imaging.


Subject(s)
DNA, Single-Stranded/chemistry , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Silver/chemistry , Biocompatible Materials/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Photons , Quantum Theory , Solubility , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Water/chemistry
9.
J Am Chem Soc ; 130(15): 5038-9, 2008 Apr 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18345630

ABSTRACT

Single-stranded oligonucleotides stabilize highly fluorescent Ag nanoclusters, with emission colors tunable via DNA sequence. We utilized DNA microarrays to optimize these scaffold sequences for creating nearly spectrally pure Ag nanocluster fluorophores that are highly photostable and exhibit great buffer stability. Five different nanocluster emitters have been created with tunable emission from the blue to the near-IR and excellent photophysical properties. Ensemble and single molecule fluorescence studies show that oligonucleotide encapsulated Ag nanoclusters exhibit significantly greater photostability and higher emission rates than commonly used cyanine dyes.


Subject(s)
Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Nanostructures/chemistry , Oligonucleotides/chemistry , Silver/chemistry , DNA/chemistry , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis , Photochemistry
10.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 8(15): 3536-3543, 2017 Aug 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28696723

ABSTRACT

We harness the photophysics of few-atom silver nanoclusters to create the first fluorophores capable of optically activated delayed fluorescence (OADF). In analogy with thermally activated delayed fluorescence, often resulting from oxygen- or collision-activated reverse intersystem crossing from triplet levels, this optically controllable/reactivated visible emission occurs with the same 2.2 ns fluorescence lifetime as that produced with primary excitation alone but is excited with near-infrared light from either of two distinct, long-lived photopopulated dark states. In addition to faster ground-state recovery under long-wavelength co-illumination, this "repumped" visible fluorescence occurs many microsceconds after visible excitation and only when gated by secondary near-IR excitation of ∼1-100 µs-lived dark excited states. By deciphering the Ag nanocluster photophysics, we demonstrate that OADF improves upon previous optical modulation schemes for near-complete background rejection in fluorescence detection. Likely extensible to other fluorophores with photopopulatable excited dark states, OADF holds potential for drastically improving fluorescence signal recovery from high backgrounds.

11.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 7(13): 2496-501, 2016 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27299945

ABSTRACT

Excitation of few-atom Ag cluster fluorescence produces significant steady-state dark state populations that can be dynamically optically depopulated with long wavelength coillumination. Modulating this secondary illumination dynamically repopulates the ground state, thereby directly modulating nanodot fluorescence without modulating background. Both fast and slow modulation enable unmodulated background to be quantitatively removed in fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) through simple correlation-based averaging. Such modulated dual-laser FCS enables recovery of pure Ag nanodot fluorescence correlations even in the presence of strong, spectrally overlapping background emission. Fluorescence recovery is linear with Fourier amplitude of the modulated fluorescence, providing a complementary approach to background-free quantitation of modulatable emitter concentration in high background environments. Using the expanding range of modulatable fluorophores, such methodologies should facilitate biologically relevant studies in both complex autofluorescent environments and multiplexed assays.

12.
J Phys Chem B ; 119(13): 4637-43, 2015 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25763888

ABSTRACT

Cyanine dyes are well-known for their bright fluorescence and utility in biological imaging. However, cyanines also readily photoisomerize to produce nonemissive dark states. Co-illumination with a secondary, red-shifted light source on-resonance with the longer wavelength absorbing dark state reverses the photoisomerization and returns the cyanine dye to the fluorescent manifold, increasing steady-state fluorescence intensity. Modulation of this secondary light source dynamically alters emission intensity, drastically improving detection sensitivity and facilitating fluorescence signals to be recovered from an otherwise overwhelming background. Red and near-IR emitting cyanine derivatives have been synthesized with varying alkyl chain lengths and halogen substituents to alter dual-laser fluorescence enhancement. Photophysical properties and enhancement with dual laser modulation were coupled with density functional calculations to characterize substituent effects on dark state photophysics, potentially improving detection in high background biological environments.


Subject(s)
Carbocyanines/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Photochemical Processes , Darkness , Fluorescence , Lasers , Models, Chemical , Spectrometry, Fluorescence
13.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 4(7): 1148-1155, 2013 Apr 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23745165

ABSTRACT

Conductive and plasmon-supporting noble metals exhibit an especially wide range of size-dependent properties, with discrete electronic levels, strong optical absorption, and efficient radiative relaxation dominating optical behavior at the ~10-atom cluster scale. In this Perspective, we describe the formation and stabilization of silver clusters using DNA templates and highlight the distinct spectroscopic and photophysical properties of the resulting hybrid fluorophores. Strong visible to near-IR emission from DNA-encapsulated silver clusters ranging in size from 5-11 atoms has been produced and characterized. Importantly, this strong Ag cluster fluorescence can be directly modulated and selectively recovered by optically controlling the dark state residence, even when faced with an overwhelming background. The strength and sequence sensitivity of the oligonucleotide-Ag interaction suggests strategies for fine tuning and stabilizing cluster-based emitters in a host of sensing and biolabeling applications that would benefit from brighter, more photostable, and quantifiable emitters in high background environments.

14.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 3(23): 3585-3591, 2012 Dec 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23419973

ABSTRACT

Fluorescent proteins (FPs) have revolutionized molecular and cellular biology; yet, discrimination over cellular autofluorescence, spectral deconvolution, or detection at low concentrations remain challenging problems in many biological applications. By optically depopulating a photoinduced dark state with orange secondary laser co-excitation, the higher-energy green AcGFP fluorescence is dynamically increased. Modulating this secondary laser then modulates the higher-energy, collected fluorescence; enabling its selective detection by removing heterogeneous background from other FPs. Order-of-magnitude reduction in obscuring fluorophore background emission has been achieved in both fixed and live cells. This longwavelength modulation expands the dimensionality to discriminate FP emitters based on dark state lifetimes and enables signal of interest to be recovered by removing heterogeneous background emitter signals. Thus, AcGFP is not only useful for extracting weak signals from systems plagued by high background, but it is a springboard for further FP optimization and utilization for improving sensitivity and selectivity in biological fluorescence imaging.

15.
Chem Sci ; 2(6): 1080-1085, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22262992

ABSTRACT

Fluorescence modulation for selective recovery of desired fluorescence signals has to date required careful fluorophore selection combined with repeated optical recovery from long-lived photoinduced dark states. Adapting an all-optical scheme, modulated Stimulated Emission Depletion generalizes such modulation schemes by eliminating the need for dark state residence by directly optically depopulating the emissive state at any externally applied frequency. Using two overlapped Gaussian laser spots with the depletion beam being intensity-modulated, fluorescence modulation is readily achieved with a depletion ratio governed by the intensity of the depleting laser. Selective image recovery of otherwise unmodulatable fluorophore signals is directly achieved through this all-optical modulation, and common STED-degrading multiphoton-excited background is readily discriminated against. Both beads and dyes in solution as well as fluorophores bound within fixed cells are readily imaged in this manner.

16.
J Phys Chem B ; 115(24): 7996-8003, 2011 Jun 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21568292

ABSTRACT

Few-atom silver clusters harbored by DNA are promising fluorophores due to their high molecular brightness along with their long- and short-term photostability. Furthermore, their emission rate can be enhanced when co-illuminated with low-energy light that optically depopulates the fluorescence-limiting dark state. The photophysical basis for this effect is evaluated for two near-infrared-emitting clusters. Clusters emitting at ∼800 nm form with C(3)AC(3)AC(3)TC(3)A and C(3)AC(3)AC(3)GC(3)A, and both exhibit a trap state with λ(max) ∼ 840 nm and an absorption cross section of (5-6) × 10(-16) cm(2)/molecule that can be optically depopulated. Transient absorption spectra, complemented by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy studies, show that the dark state has an inherent lifetime of 3-4 µs and that absorption from this state is accompanied by photoinduced crossover back to the emissive manifold of states with an action cross section of ∼2 × 10(-18) cm(2)/molecule. Relative to C(3)AC(3)AC(3)TC(3)A, C(3)AC(3)AC(3)GC(3)A produces a longer-lived trap state and permits more facile passage back to the emissive manifold. With the C(3)AC(3)AC(3)AC(3)G template, a spectrally distinct cluster forms having emission at ∼900 nm, and its trap state has a ∼4-fold shorter lifetime. These studies of optically gated fluorescence bolster the critical role of the nucleobases in both the formation and excited state dynamics of these highly emissive metallic clusters.


Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Silver/chemistry , Base Sequence , Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared
17.
J Phys Chem B ; 114(1): 660-5, 2010 Jan 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19902923

ABSTRACT

Fluorescence intermittency severely limits brightness in both single molecule and bulk fluorescence. Herein, we demonstrate that optical depopulation of organic fluorophore triplet states opens a path to significantly increased sensitivity by simultaneously increasing brightness and greatly reducing background through synchronously detected fluorescence modulation. Image recovery is achieved through selective fluorescence enhancement via modulating a secondary laser excitation at much lower energy than the observed emission in order to depopulate the long-lived triplet states. A series of xanthene dyes that exhibit efficient triplet-state formation demonstrate that this method of selective signal extraction can be achieved at moderate primary and secondary excitation intensities through tailoring dye photophysics and imaging conditions. Up to 5-fold increases in solution-based fluorescence over primary laser excitation alone was achieved upon secondary laser excitation, and dynamic control of signal modulation was demonstrated over a wide time range simply by varying the modulation frequency of the laser used for depopulation of the triplet state. We identify the photophysical characteristics that enable existing or to-be-designed fluorophores to be used in synchronously amplified fluorescence image recovery (SAFIRe) microscopy.


Subject(s)
Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Eosine Yellowish-(YS)/chemistry , Erythrosine/chemistry , Rose Bengal/chemistry
18.
Chem Sci ; 1(4): 519-526, 2010 Aug 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21915369

ABSTRACT

The electron transfer (ET) dynamics from core/multi-shell (CdSe/CdS(3ML)ZnCdS(2ML)ZnS(2ML)) quantum dots (QDs) to adsorbed Fluorescein (F27) molecules have been studied by single particle spectroscopy to probe the relationship between single QD interfacial electron transfer and blinking dynamics. Electron transfer from the QD to F27 and the subsequent recombination were directly observed by ensemble-averaged transient absorption spectroscopy. Single QD-F27 complexes show correlated fluctuation of fluorescence intensity and lifetime, similar to those observed in free QDs. With increasing ET rate (controlled by F27-to-QD ratio), the lifetime of on states decreases and relative contribution of off states increases. It was shown that ET is active for QDs in on states, the excited state lifetime of which reflects the ET rate, whereas in the off state QD excitons decay by Auger relaxation and ET is not a competitive quenching pathway. Thus, the blinking dynamics of single QDs modulate their interfacial ET activity. Furthermore, interfacial ET provides an additional pathway for generating off states, leading to correlated single QD interfacial ET and blinking dynamics in QD-acceptor complexes. Because blinking is a general phenomenon of single QDs, it appears that the correlated interfacial ET and blinking and the resulting intermittent ET activity are general phenomena for single QDs.

19.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 113(47): 20264-20270, 2009 Nov 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20161463

ABSTRACT

Various single-standed DNA-encapsulated Ag nanoclusters (nanodots) exhibit strong, discrete fluorescence with solvent polarity-dependent absorption and emission throughout the visible and near-IR. All species examined, regardless of their excitation and emission energies, show similar µs single-molecule blinking dynamics and near IR transient absorptions. The polarity dependence, µsec blinking, and indistinguishable µsec-decaying transient absorption spectra for multiple nanodots suggest a common charge transfer-based mechanism that gives rise to nanodot fluorescence intermittency. Photoinduced charge transfer that is common to all nanodot emitters is proposed to occur from the Ag cluster into the nearby DNA bases to yield a long-lived charge-separated trap state that results in blinking on the single molecule level.

20.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 104(31): 12616-21, 2007 Jul 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17519337

ABSTRACT

The water-soluble, near-IR-emitting DNA-encapsulated silver nanocluster presented herein exhibits extremely bright and photostable emission on the single-molecule and bulk levels. The photophysics have been elucidated by intensity-dependent correlation analysis and suggest a heavy atom effect of silver that rapidly depopulates an excited dark level before quenching by oxygen, thereby conferring great photostability, very high single-molecule emission rates, and essentially no blinking on experimentally relevant time scales (0.1 to >1,000 ms). Strong antibunching is observed from these biocompatible species, which emit >10(9) photons before photobleaching. The significant dark-state quantum yield even enables bunching from the emissive state to be observed as a dip in the autocorrelation curve with only a single detector as the dark state precludes emission from the emissive level. These species represent significant improvements over existing dyes, and the nonpower law blinking kinetics suggest that these very small species may be alternatives to much larger and strongly intermittent semiconductor quantum dots.


Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Nanostructures/chemistry , Silver/chemistry , Photochemistry , Spectrophotometry, Atomic , Spectrophotometry, Infrared
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