Abstract

The pursuit of better sensitivity has always been one of the central themes in Raman spectroscopy. Recently, all-far-field single-molecule Raman spectroscopy has been demonstrated by a novel hybrid spectroscopy that couples Raman scattering with fluorescence emission. However, such frequency-domain spectroscopy lacks efficient hyperspectral excitation methods and encounters intrinsic strong fluorescence backgrounds from electronic transitions, hindering its applications in advanced Raman spectroscopy and microscopy. Here we report the ultrafast time-domain spectroscopy counterpart named transient stimulated Raman excited fluorescence (T-SREF): excited by two successive broadband femtosecond pulse pairs (i.e., the pump and Stokes pulses) with time-delay scanning, strong vibrational wave packet interference is revealed on the time-domain fluorescence trace, resulting in background-free spectra of the corresponding Raman modes after the Fourier transform. T-SREF achieves background-free Raman spectra of electronic-coupled vibrational modes with sensitivity up to the level of a few molecules, which paves the way for supermultiplexed fluorescence detection and molecular dynamics sensing.

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