Single Molecule Nonlinearity in a Plasmonic Waveguide

Nano Lett. 2020 Mar 11;20(3):2152-2156. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c00196. Epub 2020 Feb 24.

Abstract

Plasmonic waveguides offer the unique possibility to confine light far below the diffraction limit. Past room temperature experiments focused on efficient generation of single waveguide plasmons by a quantum emitter. However, only the simultaneous interaction of the emitter with multiple plasmonic fields would lead to functionality in a plasmonic circuit. Here, we demonstrate the nonlinear optical interaction of a single molecule and propagating plasmons. An individual terrylene diimide (TDI) molecule is placed in the nanogap between two single-crystalline silver nanowires. A visible wavelength pump pulse and a red-shifted depletion pulse travel along the waveguide, leading to stimulated emission depletion (STED) in the observed fluorescence. The efficiency increases by up to a factor of 50 compared to far-field excitation. Our study thus demonstrates remote nonlinear four-wave mixing at a single molecule with propagating plasmons. It paves the way toward functional quantum plasmonic circuits and improved nonlinear single-molecule spectroscopy.

Keywords: nonlinear optics; plasmonic nanocircuit; quantum emitter; single-crystalline silver flake; stimulated emission depletion STED; two-wire transmission line.