TY - JOUR
T1 - Quantitative surface plasmon interferometry via upconversion photoluminescence mapping
AU - Yin, Anxiang
AU - Jing, Hao
AU - Wu, Zhan
AU - He, Qiyuan
AU - Wang, Yiliu
AU - Lin, Zhaoyang
AU - Liu, Yuan
AU - Ding, Mengning
AU - Xu, Xu
AU - Fei, Zhe
AU - Jiang, Jianhui
AU - Huang, Yu
AU - Duan, Xiangfeng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2019 Anxiang Yin et al.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Direct far-field visualization and characterization of surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) are of great importance for fundamental studies and technological applications. To probe the evanescently confined plasmon fields, one usually requires advanced nearfield techniques, which is typically not applicable for real-time, high-throughput detecting or mapping of SPPs in complicated environments. Here, we report the utilization of rare-earth-doped nanoparticles to quantitatively upconvert invisible, evanescently confined SPPs into visible photoluminescence emissions for direct far-field visualization of SPPs in a complicated environment. The observed interference fringes between the SPPs and the coherent incident light at the metal surface provide a quantitative measurement of the SPP wavelength and the SPP propagating length and the local dielectric environments. It thus creates a new signaling pathway to sensitively transduce the local dielectric environment change into interference periodicity variation, enabling a new design of directly measurable, spectrometer-free optical rulers for rapid, ultrasensitive label-free detection of various biomolecules, including streptavidin and prostate-specific antigen, down to the femtomolar level.
AB - Direct far-field visualization and characterization of surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) are of great importance for fundamental studies and technological applications. To probe the evanescently confined plasmon fields, one usually requires advanced nearfield techniques, which is typically not applicable for real-time, high-throughput detecting or mapping of SPPs in complicated environments. Here, we report the utilization of rare-earth-doped nanoparticles to quantitatively upconvert invisible, evanescently confined SPPs into visible photoluminescence emissions for direct far-field visualization of SPPs in a complicated environment. The observed interference fringes between the SPPs and the coherent incident light at the metal surface provide a quantitative measurement of the SPP wavelength and the SPP propagating length and the local dielectric environments. It thus creates a new signaling pathway to sensitively transduce the local dielectric environment change into interference periodicity variation, enabling a new design of directly measurable, spectrometer-free optical rulers for rapid, ultrasensitive label-free detection of various biomolecules, including streptavidin and prostate-specific antigen, down to the femtomolar level.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85078791441&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.34133/2019/8304824
DO - 10.34133/2019/8304824
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85078791441
SN - 2096-5168
VL - 2019
JO - Research
JF - Research
M1 - 8304824
ER -