Stratified volume photorefractive polymer structures
John J. Stankus, S.M. Silence, et al.
CLEO 1994
With high-efficiency fluorescence excitation techniques optical spectra of single impurity molecules of perylene in a polyethylene matrix can be obtained at 1.5 K. Analysis of such spectra shows a variety of spectral diffusion effects, including fast (<2 s) resonance frequency changes on the 1-100-MHz scale, which lead to a range of apparent linewidths, as well as discontinuous jumps in the resonance frequency of 10-1000 MHz on a longer time scale. In addition, light-induced changes in the resonance frequency of a single molecule (persistent spectral hole burning) have been conclusively observed by showing that the burning time decreases with increased laser power. Surprisingly, hole-burned single molecules often spontaneously return to the original frequency in 1-100 s. Measurements of the burning time for a large number of hole-burning events for the same single molecule yield an exponential burn-time distribution, which is the first direct measurement to our knowledge of the stochastic kinetics of a single molecule. Analysis of the signal-to-noise function appropriate to these experiments gives the conditions under which other systems may permit single-molecule detection: strong absorption, high fluorescence yield, weak bottlenecks in the optical pumping process, and low hole-burning quantum efficiency. © 1992 Optical Society of America. © 1992 Optical Society of America.
John J. Stankus, S.M. Silence, et al.
CLEO 1994
Anne B. Myers, Paul Tchénio, et al.
Journal of Luminescence
W.E. Moerner, D.M. Burland, et al.
American Chemical Society, Polymer Preprints, Division of Polymer Chemistry
Cecilia A. Walsh, W.E. Moerner
Journal of the Optical Society of America B: Optical Physics