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1.
Fluorescence is typically isotropic in space and collected with low efficiency. In this paper we describe surface plasmon-coupled emission (SPCE), which displays unique optical properties and can be collected with an efficiency near 50%. SPCE occurs for fluorophores within about 200 nm of a thin metallic film, in our case a 50-nm-thick silver film on a glass substrate. We show that fluorophore proximity to this film converts the normally isotropic emission into highly directional emission through the glass substrate at a well-defined angle from the normal axis. Depending on the thickness of the polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) film on the silver, the coupling efficiency of sulforhodamine 101 in PVA ranged from 30 to 49%. Directional SPCE was observed whether the fluorophore was excited directly or by the evanescent field due to the surface plasmon resonance. The emission is always polarized perpendicular to the plane of incidence, irrespective of the polarization of the incident light. The lifetimes are not substantially changed, indicating a mechanism somewhat different from that observed previously for the effects of silver particles on fluorophores. Remarkably, the directional emission shows intrinsic spectral resolution because the coupling angles depend on wavelength. The distances over which SPCE occurs, 10 to 200 nm, are useful because a large number of fluorophores can be localized within this volume. The emission of more distant fluorophores does not couple into the glass, allowing background suppression from biological samples. SPCE can be expected to become rapidly useful in a variety of analytical and medical sensing applications.  相似文献   

2.
A new method of fluorescence detection that promises to increase sensitivity by 20- to 1000-fold is described. This method will also decrease the contribution of sample autofluorescence to the detected signal. The method depends on the coupling of excited fluorophores with the surface plasmon resonance present in thin metal films, typically silver and gold. The phenomenon of surface plasmon-coupled emission (SPCE) occurs for fluorophores 20-250 nm from the metal surface, allowing detection of fluorophores over substantial distances beyond the metal-sample interface. SPCE depends on interactions of the excited fluorophore with the metal surface. This interaction is independent of the mode of excitation; that is, it does not require evanescent wave or surface-plasmon excitation. In a sense, SPCE is the inverse process of the surface plasmon resonance absorption of thin metal films. Importantly, SPCE occurs over a narrow angular distribution, converting normally isotropic emission into easily collected directional emission. Up to 50% of the emission from unoriented samples can be collected, much larger than typical fluorescence collection efficiencies near 1% or less. SPCE is due only to fluorophores near the metal surface and may be regarded as emission from the induced surface plasmons. Autofluorescence from more distal parts of the sample is decreased due to decreased coupling. SPCE is highly polarized and autofluorescence can be further decreased by collecting only the polarized component or only the light propagating with the appropriate angle. Examples showing how simple optical configurations can be used in diagnostics, sensing, or biotechnology applications are presented. Surface plasmon-coupled emission is likely to find widespread applications throughout the biosciences.  相似文献   

3.
The authors describe a new approach to measuring DNA hybridization based on surface plasmon-coupled emission (SPCE). SPCE is the resonance coupling of excited fluorophores with electron motions in thin metal films, resulting in efficient transfer of energy through the film and radiation into the glass substrate. The authors evaluated the use of SPCE for detection of DNA hybridization. An unlabeled capture biotinylated oligonucleotide was attached near the surface of a thin (50 nm) silver film using streptavidin. The authors then measured the emission intensity of single-stranded Cy5-labeled DNA upon binding to a complementary oligomer attached to a silver film. Hybridization could be detected by an increase in SPCE, which appeared as light radiated into the substrate at a sharply defined angle near 73 degrees from the normal. The largest signals were observed when the excitation angle of incidence equaled the surface plasmon wavelength, but directional emission was also observed without excitation by the surface plasmon evanescent field. The increased intensity is due to proximity to the metal surface, so that hybridization can be detected without a change in the quantum yield of the fluorophore. These results indicate that SPCE can provide highly sensitive real-time measurement of DNA hybridization.  相似文献   

4.
We describe a new method for multi-wavelength immunoassays using surface plasmon-coupled emission (SPCE). This phenomenon is coupling of excited fluorophores with a nearby thin metal film, in our case silver, resulting in strongly directional emission into the underlying glass substrate. The angle at which the radiation propagate through the prism depends on the surface plasmon angle for the relevant wavelength. These angles depend on emission wavelength, allowing measurement of multiple analytes using multiple emission wavelengths. We demonstrated this possibility using antibodies labeled with either Rhodamine Red-X or AlexaFluor 647. These antibodies were directed against an antigen protein bound to the silver surface. The emission from each labeled antibody occurred at a different angle on the glass prism, allowing independent measurement of surface binding of each antibody. This method of SPCE immunoassays can be readily extended to 4 or more wavelengths.  相似文献   

5.
There is a continuing need to increase the brightness and photostability of fluorophores for use in biotechnology, medical diagnostics, and cell imaging. One approach developed during the past decade is to use metallic surfaces and nanostructures. It is now known that excited state fluorophores display interactions with surface plasmons, which can increase the radiative decay rates, modify the spatial distribution of emission, and result in directional emission. One important example is surface plasmon-coupled emission (SPCE). In this phenomenon, the fluorophores at close distances from a thin metal film, typically silver, display emission over a small range of angles into the substrate. A disadvantage of SPCE is that the emission occurs at large angles relative to the surface normal and at angles that are larger than the critical angle for the glass substrate. The large angles make it difficult to collect all of the coupled emission and have prevented the use of SPCE with high-throughput and/or array applications. In the current article, we describe a simple multilayer metal–dielectric structure that allows excitation with light that is perpendicular (normal) to the plane and provides emission within a narrow angular distribution that is normal to the plane. This structure consists of a thin silver film on top of a multilayer dielectric Bragg grating, with no nanoscale features except for the metal or dielectric layer thicknesses. Our structure is designed to support optical Tamm states, which are trapped electromagnetic modes between the metal film and the underlying Bragg grating. We used simulations with the transfer matrix method to understand the optical properties of Tamm states and localization of the modes or electric fields in the structure. Tamm states can exist with zero in-plane wavevector components and can be created without the use of a coupling prism. We show that fluorophores on top of the metal film can interact with the Tamm state under the metal film and display Tamm state-coupled emission (TSCE). In contrast to SPCE, the Tamm states can display either S or P polarization. The TSCE angle is highly sensitive to wavelength, which suggests the use of Tamm structures to provide both directional emission and wavelength dispersion. Metallic structures can modify fluorophore decay rates but also have high losses. Photonic crystals have low losses but may lack the enhanced light-induced fields near metals. The combination of plasmonic and photonic structures offers the opportunity for radiative decay engineering to design new formats for clinical testing and other fluorescence-based applications.  相似文献   

6.
We present a new approach for performing fluorescence immunoassay in whole blood using fluorescently labeled anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G (IgG) on a silver surface. This approach, which is based on surface plasmon-coupled emission (SPCE), provides increased sensitivity and substantial background reduction due to exclusive selection of the signal from the fluorophores located near a bioaffinity surface. This article describes the effect of an optically dense sample matrix, namely human whole blood and serum, on the intensity of the SPCE. An antigen (rabbit IgG) was adsorbed to a slide covered with a thin silver metal layer, and the SPCE signal from the fluorophore-labeled anti-rabbit antibody, binding to the immobilized antigen, was detected. The effect of the sample matrix (buffer, human serum, or human whole blood) on the end-point immunoassay SPCE signal was studied. It was demonstrated that the kinetics of binding could be monitored directly in whole blood or serum. The results showed that human serum and human whole blood attenuate the SPCE end-point signal and the immunoassay kinetic signal only approximately two- and threefold, respectively, as compared with buffer, resulting in signals that are easily detectable even in whole blood. The high optical absorption of the hemoglobin can be tolerated because only fluorophores within a couple of hundred nanometers from the metallic film contribute to SPCE. Excited fluorophores outside the 200-nm layer do not contribute to SPCE, and their free space emission is not transmitted through the opaque metallic film into the glass substrate. We believe that SPCE has the potential of becoming a powerful approach for performing immunoassays based on surface-bound analytes or antibodies for many biomarkers directly in dense samples such as whole blood with no need for washing steps.  相似文献   

7.
Metallic surfaces can have unusual effects on fluorophores such as increasing or decreasing the rates of radiative decay and the rates of resonance energy transfer (RET). In the present article we describe the effects of metallic silver island films on the emission spectra, lifetimes, and energy transfer for several fluorophores. The fluorophores are not covalently coupled to the silver islands so that there are a range of fluorophore-to-metal distances. We show that proximity of fluorophores to the silver islands results in increased fluorescence intensity, with the largest enhancement for the lowest-quantum-yield fluorophores. Importantly, the metal-induced increases in intensity are accompanied by decreased lifetimes and increased photostability. These effects demonstrate that the silver islands have increased the radiative decay rates of the fluorophore. For solvent-sensitive fluorophores the emission spectra shifted to shorted wavelengths in the presence of the silver islands, which is consistent with a decrease of the apparent lifetime for fluorophores near the metal islands. We also observed an increased intensity and blue spectral shift for the protein human glyoxalase, which displays a low quantum yield for its intrinsic tryptophan emission. In this case the blue shift is thought to be due to increased emission from a buried low-quantum-yield tryptophan residue. Increased intensities were also observed for the intrinsic emission of the nucleic acid bases adenine and thymine and for single-stranded 15-mers poly(T) and poly(C). And finally, we observed increased RET for donors and acceptors in solution and when bound to double-helical DNA. These results demonstrate that metallic particles can be used to modify the emission from intrinsic and extrinsic fluorophores in biochemical systems.  相似文献   

8.
The fluorescence collected from a fluorophore which is near a planar interface and is excited by a laser beam that is totally internally reflected at the interface depends on the direction of the absorption and emission transition dipole moments of the fluorophore with respect to the interface, on the distance from the fluorophore to the interface, on the angle of incidence and polarization direction of the exciting beam, and on properties of the collection optics. Expressions are derived for the excitation and subsequent emission and collection of fluorescence from a population of fluorophores near a planar interface. Presented is a general model-independent method of obtaining characteristic parameters of the spatial and orientational distribution of the population of fluorophores, from a measure of the fluorescence collected as a function of the polarization and the incidence angle of the totally internally reflected laser beam. The method is illustrated with several simulation calculations.  相似文献   

9.
Metallic particles and surfaces display diverse and complex optical properties. Examples include the intense colors of noble metal colloids, surface plasmon resonance absorption by thin metal films, and quenching of excited fluorophores near the metal surfaces. Recently, the interactions of fluorophores with metallic particles and surfaces (metals) have been used to obtain increased fluorescence intensities, to develop assays based on fluorescence quenching by gold colloids, and to obtain directional radiation from fluorophores near thin metal films. For metal-enhanced fluorescence it is difficult to predict whether a particular metal structure, such as a colloid, fractal, or continuous surface, will quench or enhance fluorescence. In the present report we suggest how the effects of metals on fluorescence can be explained using a simple concept, based on radiating plasmons (RPs). The underlying physics may be complex but the concept is simple to understand. According to the RP model, the emission or quenching of a fluorophore near the metal can be predicted from the optical properties of the metal structures as calculated from electrodynamics, Mie theory, and/or Maxwell's equations. For example, according to Mie theory and the size and shape of the particle, the extinction of metal colloids can be due to either absorption or scattering. Incident energy is dissipated by absorption. Far-field radiation is created by scattering. Based on our model small colloids are expected to quench fluorescence because absorption is dominant over scattering. Larger colloids are expected to enhance fluorescence because the scattering component is dominant over absorption. The ability of a metal's surface to absorb or reflect light is due to wavenumber matching requirements at the metal-sample interface. Wavenumber matching considerations can also be used to predict whether fluorophores at a given distance from a continuous planar surface will be emitted or quenched. These considerations suggest that the so called "lossy surface waves" which quench fluorescence are due to induced electron oscillations which cannot radiate to the far-field because wavevector matching is not possible. We suggest that the energy from the fluorophores thought to be lost by lossy surface waves can be recovered as emission by adjustment of the sample to allow wavevector matching. The RP model provides a rational approach for designing fluorophore-metal configurations with the desired emissive properties and a basis for nanophotonic fluorophore technology.  相似文献   

10.
We demonstrate directional enhanced fluorescence emission from fluorophores located above gold wire gratings. In contrast to previous studies on corrugated films, efficient coupling was recorded for multiple plasmon modes associated with both the active and substrate side of the wires. This difference is likely due to the subtle differences in how light interacts with corrugated films versus metal films with periodic subwavelength slots. For corrugated films, coupling between modes on opposite sides of the grating are out of phase, and therefore plasmon modes on the opposite side of the grating are only weakly excited. For wire gratings, transmission and reflection features have been modeled well with a dynamical diffraction model that includes surface plasmons, which allows for efficient coupling to surface plasmon modes on both sides of the grating. We also compared the two mechanisms for fluorescent enhancement, namely the intense electromagnetic field associated with surface plasmons and excited fluorophores radiating via surface plasmon modes. We found the latter mechanism clearly dominant.  相似文献   

11.
Intrinsic fluorescence from DNA can be enhanced by metallic particles   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
High sensitivity detection of DNA is essential for genomics. The intrinsic fluorescence from DNA is very weak and almost all methods for detecting DNA rely on the use of extrinsic fluorescent probes. We show that the intrinsic emission from DNA can be enhanced many-fold by spatial proximity to silver island films. Silver islands are subwavelength size patches of metallic silver on an inert substrate. Time-resolved measurements show a decreased lifetime for the intrinsic DNA emission near the silver islands. These results of increased intensity and decreased lifetime indicate a metal-induced increase in the radiative rate decay of the DNA bases. The possibility of increased radiative decay rates for DNA bases and other fluorophores suggest a wide variety of DNA measurements and other biomedical assays based on metal-induced increases in the fluorescence quantum yield of weakly fluorescent substances.  相似文献   

12.
We report theoretical predictions and experimental observations of the reduced detection volume with the use of surface-plasmon-coupled emission (SPCE). The effective fluorescence volume (detection volume) in SPCE experiments depends on two near-field factors: the depth of evanescent wave excitation and a distance-dependent coupling of excited fluorophores to the surface plasmons. With direct excitation of the sample (reverse Kretschmann excitation) the detection volume is restricted only by the distance-dependent coupling of the excitation to the surface plasmons. However, with the excitation through the glass prism at surface plasmon resonance angle (Kretschmann configuration), the detection volume is a product of evanescent wave penetration depth and distance-dependent coupling. In addition, the detection volume is further reduced by a metal quenching of excited fluorophores at a close proximity (below 10nm). The height of the detected volume size is 40-70nm, depending on the orientation of the excited dipoles. We show that, by using the Kretschmann configuration in a microscope with a high-numerical-aperture objective (1.45) together with confocal detection, the detection volume can be reduced to 1-2attoL. The strong dependence of the coupling to the surface plasmons on the orientation of excited dipoles can be used to study the small conformational changes of macromolecules.  相似文献   

13.
During the past decade the interactions of fluorophores with metallic particles and surfaces has become an active area of research. These near-field interactions of fluorophores with surface plasmons have resulted in increased brightness and directional emission. However, using metals has some disadvantages such as quenching at short fluorophore–metal distances and increased rates of energy dissipation due to lossy metals. These unfavorable effects are not expected in dielectrics. In this article, we describe the interactions of fluorophores with one-dimensional (1D) photonic crystals (PCs), which have alternating layers of dielectrics with dimensions that create a photonic band gap (PBG). Freely propagating light at the PBG wavelength will be reflected. However, similar to metals, we show that fluorophores within near-field distances of the 1DPC interacts with the structure. Our results demonstrate that these fluorophores can interact with both internal modes and Bloch surface waves (BSWs) of the 1DPC. For fluorophores on the surface of the 1DPC, the emission dominantly occurs through the 1DPC and into the substrate. We refer to these two phenomena together as Bragg grating-coupled emission (BGCE). Here we describe our preliminary results on BGCE. 1DPCs are simple to fabricate and can be handled and reused without damage. We believe that BGCE provides opportunities for new formats for fluorescence detection and sensing.  相似文献   

14.
The surface plasmon polariton (SPP) coupling and enhancement in silver nanowire–nanoantenna structure is proposed and simulated by using finite difference time domain method. The results demonstrate that three-arm antenna can effectively enhance the coupling efficiency at the incident end and the SPP field intensity at the emission end. The enhancement factor, which is defined as the ratio of the SPP field intensity at the emission end with and without the three-arm antenna, for the various antenna arm lengths and incident wavelengths under different incident angles are calculated. The suggested structure can be served as an enhanced plasmonic waveguide for the nanophotonic and plasmonic circuits in the future.  相似文献   

15.
We examined the effects of metallic silver particles on resonance energy transfer (RET) between fluorophores covalently bound to DNA. A coumarin donor and a Cy3 acceptor were positioned at opposite ends of a 23-bp double helical DNA oligomer. In the absence of silver particles the extent of RET is near 9%, consistent with a Forster distance R(0) near 50 A and a donor to acceptor distance near 75 A. The transfer efficiency increased when the solution of AMCA-DNA-Cy3 was placed between two quartz plates coated with silver island films to near 64%, as determined by both steady-state and time-resolved measurements. The apparent R(0) in the presence of silver island films increases to about 110 A. These values of the transfer efficiency and R(0) represent weighted averages for donor-acceptor pairs near and distant from the metallic surfaces, so that the values at an optimal distance are likely to be larger. The increased energy transfer is observed only between two sandwiched silvered slides. When we replaced one silvered slide with a quartz plate the effect vanished. Also, the increased energy transfer was not observed for silvered slides separated more than a few micrometers. These results suggest the use of metal-enhanced RET in PCR, hybridization, and other DNA assays, and the possibility of controlling energy transfer by the distance between silver surfaces.  相似文献   

16.
Fluorescence labeling is the prevailing imaging technique in cell biology research. When they involve statistical investigations on a large number of cells, experimental studies require both low magnification to get a reliable statistical population and high contrast to achieve accurate diagnosis on the nature of the cells' perturbation. Because microscope objectives of low magnification generally yield low collection efficiency, such studies are limited by the fluorescence signal weakness. To overcome this technological bottleneck, we proposed a new method based on metal-coated substrates that enhance the fluorescence process and improve collection efficiency in epifluorescence observation and that can be directly used with a common microscope setup. We developed a model based on the dipole approximation with the aim of simulating the optical behavior of a fluorophore on such a substrate and revealing the different mechanisms responsible for fluorescence enhancement. The presence of a reflective surface modifies both excitation and emission processes and additionally reshapes fluorescence emission lobes. From both theoretical and experimental results, we found the fluorescence signal emitted by a molecular cyanine 3 dye layer to be amplified by a factor approximately 30 when fluorophores are separated by a proper distance from the substrate. We then adapted our model to the case of homogeneously stained micrometer-sized objects and demonstrated mean signal amplification by a factor approximately 4. Finally, we applied our method to fluorescence imaging of dog kidney cells and verified experimentally the simulated results.  相似文献   

17.
Plasmonic Properties of Silver Nanoparticles on Two Substrates   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In this paper, we examine the plasmonic properties of silver nanoparticles, with an emphasis on the sensitivity of the extinction spectra on the supporting substrate: silica (SiO2) microsphere and indium tin oxide (ITO) coated glass slide, on which silver particles are deposited electroless and electrochemically, respectively. The microstructures and phases of these nanoparticles are characterized by transmission electron microscopy, field emission electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction analysis. The surface plasmon resonance (SPR) properties which are experimentally measured in the ultraviolet-visible-near infrared spectral region are compared to electrodynamics calculations based on the discrete dipole approximation. A wide SPR band ranging from 400 to 800 nm is observed for the silver nanoparticles on a silica microsphere, which is similar to the plasmon resonance characteristics of metal nanoshells. The SPR of a conducting substrate, however, has an effect on the plasmonic properties of silver nanoparticles at longer wavelength.   相似文献   

18.
In this work, we have studied the role of light incidence angle in the suppression of Fano resonance loss for mediating broadband light incoupling. At light normal incidence angle, the transmission loss of silver nanoparticles (Ag NPs) integrated 100 μm silicon (Si) wafer is reduced to ~?4 from ~?11%, and total reflectance is reduced to 32.7 from 38.7%. The reduction in reflectance is observed only in surface plasmon off-resonance region of the NPs, but the reflectance is enhanced slightly in surface plasmon resonance (SPR) region. With the change in light incident angles, we have observed a reduction in reflectance from NPs integrated silicon wafer at SPR region. At 40° light incident angle, the reflectance is reduced to 21 from 38.7% due to minimization of the Fano resonance in SPR region of the NPs. The Fano resonance loss reduction is explained based on modification in NPs’ dipole and quadrupole modes hybridization at the silicon interface with different light incident angles instead of normal incidence. Experimental observations are validated by simulating Ag NPs’ near-fields and angular distribution of far-fields at the silicon interface, scattering efficiency spectra at different light incident angles by finite difference time domain calculations.  相似文献   

19.
Förster resonant energy transfer (FRET) measurements are widely used to obtain information about molecular interactions and conformations through the dependence of FRET efficiency on the proximity of donor and acceptor fluorophores. Fluorescence lifetime measurements can provide quantitative analysis of FRET efficiency and interacting population fraction. Many FRET experiments exploit the highly specific labelling of genetically expressed fluorescent proteins, applicable in live cells and organisms. Unfortunately, the typical assumption of fast randomization of fluorophore orientations in the analysis of fluorescence lifetime‐based FRET readouts is not valid for fluorescent proteins due to their slow rotational mobility compared to their upper state lifetime. Here, previous analysis of effectively static isotropic distributions of fluorophore dipoles on FRET measurements is incorporated into new software for fitting donor emission decay profiles. Calculated FRET parameters, including molar population fractions, are compared for the analysis of simulated and experimental FRET data under the assumption of static and dynamic fluorophores and the intermediate regimes between fully dynamic and static fluorophores, and mixtures within FRET pairs, is explored. Finally, a method to correct the artefact resulting from fitting the emission from static FRET pairs with isotropic angular distributions to the (incorrect) typically assumed dynamic FRET decay model is presented.   相似文献   

20.
A lithography free approach to fabricating optically thin (~10 nm) noble metal electrodes with a dense array of sub‐wavelength apertures is reported. These nano‐structured electrodes support surface plasmon resonances which couple strongly with visible light concentrating it near to the electrode surface. They are also remarkably robust and can be fabricated on glass and plastic substrates with a sheet resistance of <15 Ω sq?1. As the window electrode in solution processed and vacuum deposited organic photovoltaics (OPV) the photocurrent is increased by as much as 28% as compared to identical devices without apertures, demonstrating that the apertures do not need to have a tight size and/or shape distribution to be effective. As a drop‐in replacement for the indium‐tin oxide electrode in flexible OPV these plasmon‐active electrodes offer superior performance; 5.1% vs. 4.6%, demonstrating that this class of electrode is a truly viable alternative to conducting oxide window electrodes for OPV.  相似文献   

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