Abstract

Photonic antennas amplify and confine optical fields at the nanoscale offering excellent perspectives for nanoimaging and nanospectroscopy. Increased resolution beyond the diffraction limit has been demonstrated using a variety of antenna designs, but multicolor nanoscale imaging is precluded by their resonance behavior. Here we report on the design of a novel hybrid antenna probe based on a monopole nanoantenna engineered on a bowtie nanoaperture. The device combines broadband enhanced emission, extreme field confinement down to few nanometers, and zero-background illumination. We demonstrate simultaneous dual-color single molecule nanoimaging with 20 nm resolution and angstrom localization precision, corresponding to 10(3)-fold improvement compared to diffraction-limited optics. When interacting with individual molecules in the near-field, our innovative design enables the emission of 10(4) photon-counts per molecule in a 20 nm excitation region, allowing direct discrimination of spectrally distinct molecules separated by 2.1 ± 0.4 nm. We foresee that background-free nanolight sources will open new horizons in optical nanoscopy and fluorescence spectroscopy by providing multicolor detection of standard fluorescent molecules fully compatible with live cell research.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call