Tailoring Experimental Configurations to Probe Transition
Dipoles of Fluorescent Nanoemitters by Polarimetry or Fourier Imaging
with Enhanced Sensitivity
posted on 2021-08-19, 16:39authored byJiawen Liu, Agnès Maître, Laurent Coolen
Probing
the transition dipoles responsible for the luminescence
of a nanoemitter is essential to understanding its physical properties,
its interactions with its environment, and its potential applications.
Various methods in photoluminescence microscopy, based on polarimetry
or Fourier imaging, have been developed to measure an emitter’s
dipole properties: the number of radiating dipoles, the oscillator
strength ratio between them, and their orientation. In this article,
we model the most used of these protocols and show that their sensitivity
depends crucially on the experimental conditions: substrate material,
presence of another lower or upper layer, and objective numerical
aperture. We develop guidelines to optimize the measurement sensitivity
by tailoring the experimental conditions, depending on the type of
protocol used and the dipole property to be measured.