Anomalous Fluorescence Enhancement from Double Heterostructure 3D Colloidal Photonic Crystals-A Multifunctional Fluorescence-Based Sensor Platform

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Author(s)
Eftekhari, Ehsan
Li, Xiang
Kim, Tak H
Gan, Zongsong
Cole, Ivan S
Zhao, Dongyuan
Kielpinski, Dave
Gu, Min
Li, Qin
Year published
2015
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Show full item recordAbstract
Augmenting fluorescence intensity is of vital importance to the development of chemical and
biochemical sensing, imaging and miniature light sources. Here we report an unprecedented
fluorescence enhancement with a novel architecture of multilayer three-dimensional colloidal
photonic crystals self-assembled from polystyrene spheres. The new technique uses a double
heterostructure, which comprises a top and a bottom layer with a periodicity overlapping the
excitation wavelength (E) of the emitters, and a middle layer with a periodicity matching the
fluorescence wavelength (F) and a thickness that supports constructive interference ...
View more >Augmenting fluorescence intensity is of vital importance to the development of chemical and biochemical sensing, imaging and miniature light sources. Here we report an unprecedented fluorescence enhancement with a novel architecture of multilayer three-dimensional colloidal photonic crystals self-assembled from polystyrene spheres. The new technique uses a double heterostructure, which comprises a top and a bottom layer with a periodicity overlapping the excitation wavelength (E) of the emitters, and a middle layer with a periodicity matching the fluorescence wavelength (F) and a thickness that supports constructive interference for the excitation wavelength. This E-F-E double heterostructure displays direction-dependent light trapping for both excitation and fluorescence, coupling the modes of photonic crystal with multiple-beam interference. The E-F-E double heterostructure renders an additional 5-fold enhancement to the extraordinary FL amplification of Rhodamine B in monolithic E CPhCs, and 4.3-fold acceleration of emission dynamics. Such a self-assembled double heterostructue CPhCs may find significant applications in illumination, laser, chemical/biochemical sensing, and solar energy harvesting. We further demonstrate the multifunctionality of the E-F-E double heterostructure CPhCs in Hg (II) sensing.
View less >
View more >Augmenting fluorescence intensity is of vital importance to the development of chemical and biochemical sensing, imaging and miniature light sources. Here we report an unprecedented fluorescence enhancement with a novel architecture of multilayer three-dimensional colloidal photonic crystals self-assembled from polystyrene spheres. The new technique uses a double heterostructure, which comprises a top and a bottom layer with a periodicity overlapping the excitation wavelength (E) of the emitters, and a middle layer with a periodicity matching the fluorescence wavelength (F) and a thickness that supports constructive interference for the excitation wavelength. This E-F-E double heterostructure displays direction-dependent light trapping for both excitation and fluorescence, coupling the modes of photonic crystal with multiple-beam interference. The E-F-E double heterostructure renders an additional 5-fold enhancement to the extraordinary FL amplification of Rhodamine B in monolithic E CPhCs, and 4.3-fold acceleration of emission dynamics. Such a self-assembled double heterostructue CPhCs may find significant applications in illumination, laser, chemical/biochemical sensing, and solar energy harvesting. We further demonstrate the multifunctionality of the E-F-E double heterostructure CPhCs in Hg (II) sensing.
View less >
Journal Title
Scientific Reports
Volume
5
Copyright Statement
© The Author(s) 2015. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Subject
Nanotechnology not elsewhere classified