Issue 38, 2013

Emission enhancement and lifetime modification of phosphorescence on silver nanoparticle aggregates

Abstract

Silver nanoparticle aggregates have been shown to support very large enhancements of fluorescence intensity from organic dye molecules coupled with an extreme reduction in observed fluorescence lifetimes. Here we show that for the same type of aggregates, similar enhancement factors (∼75× in intensity and ∼3400× in lifetime compared to the native radiative lifetime) are observed for a ruthenium-based phosphorescent dye (when taking into account the effect of charge and the excitation/emission wavelengths). Additionally, the inherently long native phosphorescence lifetimes practically enable more detailed analyses of the distribution of lifetimes (compared with the case with fluorescence decays). It was thus possible to unambiguously observe the deviation from mono-exponential decay which we attribute to emission from a distribution of fluorophores with different lifetimes, as we could expect from a random aggregation process. We believe that combining phosphorescent dyes with plasmonic structures, even down to the single dye level, will offer a convenient approach to better characterize plasmonic systems in detail.

Graphical abstract: Emission enhancement and lifetime modification of phosphorescence on silver nanoparticle aggregates

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
29 Jan 2013
Accepted
17 May 2013
First published
20 May 2013
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2013,15, 15734-15739

Emission enhancement and lifetime modification of phosphorescence on silver nanoparticle aggregates

R. Gill, L. Tian, H. van Amerongen and V. Subramaniam, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2013, 15, 15734 DOI: 10.1039/C3CP50407G

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