Issue 29, 2021

Anisotropic acoustic phonon polariton-enhanced infrared spectroscopy for single molecule detection

Abstract

Nanoscale Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (nano-FTIR) based on scanning probe microscopy enables the identification of the chemical composition and structure of surface species with a high spatial resolution (∼10 nm), which is crucial for exploring catalytic reaction processes, cellular processes, virus detection, etc. However, the characterization of a single molecule with nano-FTIR is still challenging due to the weak coupling between the molecule and infrared light due to a large size mismatch. Here, we propose a novel structure (monolayer α-MoO3/air nanogap/Au) to excite anisotropic acoustic phonon polaritons (APhPs) with ultra-high field confinement (mode volume, VAPhPs ∼ 10−11V0) and electromagnetic energy enhancement (>107), which largely enhance the interaction of single molecules with infrared light. In addition, the anisotropic APhP-assisted nano-FTIR can detect single molecular dipoles in directions both along and perpendicular to the probe axis, while pristine nano-FTIR mainly detects molecular dipoles along the probe axis. The proposed structure provides a way to detect a single molecule, which will impact the fields of biology, chemistry, energy, and environment through fundamental research and applications.

Graphical abstract: Anisotropic acoustic phonon polariton-enhanced infrared spectroscopy for single molecule detection

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Mar 2021
Accepted
21 Jun 2021
First published
25 Jun 2021

Nanoscale, 2021,13, 12720-12726

Anisotropic acoustic phonon polariton-enhanced infrared spectroscopy for single molecule detection

W. Lyu, H. Teng, C. Wu, X. Zhang, X. Guo, X. Yang and Q. Dai, Nanoscale, 2021, 13, 12720 DOI: 10.1039/D1NR01701B

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