Abstract

The interaction between light and metal nanoparticles enables investigations of microscopic phenomena on nanometer length and ultrashort timescales, benefiting from strong confinement and enhancement of the optical field. However, the ultrafast dynamics of these nanoparticles are primarily investigated by multiphoton photoluminescence on picoseconds or photoemission on femtoseconds independently. Here, we presented two-photon photoluminescence (TPPL) measurements on individual Au nanobipyramids (AuNP) to reveal their ultrafast dynamics by double-pulse excitation on a global timescale ranging from subfemtosecond to tens of picoseconds. Two orders of magnitude photoluminescence enhancement, namely, coherent interference fringes, has been demonstrated. Power-dependent measurements uncovered the transform of the nonlinearity from 1 to 2 when the interpulse delay varied from tens of femtoseconds to tens of picoseconds. We proved that the real intermediate state plays a critical role in the observed phenomena, supported by numerical simulations with a three-state model. Our results provide insight into the role of intermediate states in the ultrafast dynamics of noble metal nanoparticles. The presence of the intermediate states in AuNP and the coherent control of state populations offer interesting perspectives for imaging, sensing, nanophotonics, and in particular, for preparing macroscopic superposition states at room temperature and low-power superresolution stimulated emission depletion microscopy.

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