Electron Transfer-Induced Blinking in Ag Nanodot Fluorescence

Sandeep Patel(Georgia Institute of Technology), Matteo Cozzuol(Georgia Institute of Technology), Joel M. Hales(Georgia Institute of Technology), Chris I. Richards(Georgia Institute of Technology), Matthew M. Sartin(Georgia Institute of Technology), Jung‐Cheng Hsiang(Georgia Institute of Technology), Tom Vosch(Georgia Institute of Technology), Joseph W. Perry(Georgia Institute of Technology), Robert M. Dickson(Georgia Institute of Technology)
The Journal of Physical Chemistry C
November 2, 2009
Cited by 145Open Access
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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.


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