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Metal-enhanced fluorescence electric field enhancement

To understand the importance of spectral overlap to metal-enhanced fluorescence, it is useful to review the basics of metal-enhanced fluorescence. Metal nanostructures can alter the apparent fluorescence from nearby fluorophores in two ways. First, metal nanoparticles can enhance the excitation rate of the nearby fluorophore, as the excitation rate is proportional to the electric field intensity that is increased by the local-field enhancement. Fluorophores in such "hot spots" absorb more light than in the absence of the metal nanoparticle. Second, metal nanoparticles can alter the radiative decay rate and nonradiative decay rate of the nearby fluorophore, thus changing both quantum yield and the lifetime of the emitting species. We can summarize the various effects of a nanoparticle on the apparent fluorescence intensity, Y p, of a nearby fluorophore as ... [Pg.91]

The detected fluorescence can be significantly enhanced, however, by exploiting the plasmonic enhancement which can occur when a metal nanoparticle (NP) is placed in the vicinity of a fluorescent label or dye [1-3]. This effect is due to the localised surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) associated with the metal NP, which modifies the intensity of the electromagnetic (EM) field around the dye and which, under certain conditions, increases the emitted fluorescence signal. The effect is dependent on a number of parameters such as metal type, NP size and shape, NP-fluorophore separation and fluorophore quantum efficiency. There are two principal enhancement mechanisms an increase in the excitation rate of the fluorophore and an increase in the fluorophore quantum efficiency. The first effect occurs because the excitation rate is directly proportional to the square of the electric field amplitude, and the maximum enhancement occurs when the LSPR wavelength, coincides with the peak of the fluorophore absorption band [4, 5]. The second effect involves an increase in the quantum efficiency and is maximised when the coincides with the peak of the fluorophore emission band [6]. [Pg.139]

The field reaches its maximum at the surface plasmon resonance frequency when e = -2 Co where Co is the dielectric constant of the medium surrounding the particle surface. This induced field of the metallic nanoparticies provides an external field for the fluorescence excitation of the molecules in addition to the electric field of the incident light and thus increases the absorption rate which is responsible for the enhanced fluorescence intensity. [Pg.579]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.286 ]




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