Fluorescence intermittency

Fluorescence intermittency, or blinking, is the phenomenon of random switching between ON (bright) and OFF (dark) states of the emitter under its continuous excitation. It is a common property of the nanoscale emitters (molecular fluorophores, colloidal quantum dots) related to the competition between the radiative and non-radiative relaxation pathways.[1][2] The peculiar feature of such blinking in most cases is the power-law (in contrast to exponential) statistics of the ON and OFF time distributions,[2] meaning that the measurements of the time-averaged intensity of a single emitter is not reproducible in different experiments and implying a complex dynamics of the involved process.[1][2][3] In other words, in one experiment the emitter can blink frequently, while in another it may stay ON (or OFF) for almost entire length of the experiment (even for extremely long measurement times).

For CdSe-ZnS core-shell nanocrystals, "charge trapping" is the dominant theory explaining observed power-law blinking kinetics. Charge carrier trapping describes the transfer of a charge carrier from a delocalized electronic state of the nanocrystal to a localized state.[4]


See also

References

  1. Stefani, Fernando D, Jacob P Hoogenboom, and Eli Barkai. 2009. "Beyond quantum jumps: Blinking nano - scale light emitters." Physics Today 34-39.
  2. Frantsuzov, Pavel; Kuno, Masaru; Jankó, Boldizsár; Marcus, Rudolph A. (2008). "Universal emission intermittency in quantum dots, nanorods and nanowires". Nature Physics. 4 (7): 519–522. arXiv:0810.2509. doi:10.1038/nphys1001. S2CID 18751911.
  3. Krauss, Todd D.; Peterson, Jeffrey J. (2010). "Bright Future for Fluorescence Blinking in Semiconductor Nanocrystals". J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 1 (9): 1377–1382. doi:10.1021/jz100321z.
  4. Cordones, Amy A.; Leone, Stephen R. (2013-03-25). "Mechanisms for charge trapping in single semiconductor nanocrystals probed by fluorescence blinking". Chemical Society Reviews. 42 (8): 3209–3221. doi:10.1039/C2CS35452G. ISSN 1460-4744. PMID 23306775.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.