Tiancheng Zuo, Harrison J. Goldwyn, Benjamin P. Isaacoff, David J. Masiello, and Julie S. Biteen
The strong light–matter interactions between dyes and plasmonic nanoantennas enable the study of fundamental molecular-optical processes. Here, we overcome conventional limitations with high-throughput single-molecule polarization-resolved microscopy to measure dye emission polarization modifications upon near-field coupling to a gold nanorod. We determine that the emission polarization distribution is not only rotated toward the nanorod’s dominant localized surface plasmon mode as expected, but it is also unintuitively broadened. With a reduced-order analytical model, we elucidate how this distribution broadening depends upon both far-field interference and off-resonant coupling between the molecular dipole and the nanorod transverse plasmon mode. Experiments and modeling reveal that a nearby plasmonic nanoantenna affects dye emission polarization through a multicolor process, even when the orthogonal plasmon modes are separated by approximately 3 times the dye emission line width. Beyond advancing our understanding of plasmon-coupled emission modifications, this work promises to improve high-sensitivity single-molecule fluorescence imaging, biosensing, and spectral engineering.
DOI
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