posted on 2016-11-16, 00:00authored byRenren Deng, Juan Wang, Runfeng Chen, Wei Huang, Xiaogang Liu
The stringent distance dependence
of Förster resonance energy
transfer (FRET) has limited the ability of an energy donor to donate
excitation energy to an acceptor over a Förster critical distance
(R0) of 2–6 nm. This poses a fundamental
size constraint (<8 nm or ∼4R0) for experimentation requiring particle-based energy donors. Here,
we describe a spatial distribution function model and theoretically
validate that the particle size constraint can be mitigated through
coupling FRET with a resonant energy migration process. By combining
excitation energy migration and surface trapping, we demonstrate experimentally
an over 600-fold enhancement over acceptor emission for large nanocrystals
(30 nm or ∼15R0) with surface-anchored
molecular acceptors. Our work shows that the migration-coupled approach
can dramatically improve sensitivity in FRET-limited measurement,
with potential applications ranging from facile photochemical synthesis
to biological sensing and imaging at the single-molecule level.