posted on 2017-03-21, 00:00authored byPavel Moroz, Natalia Razgoniaeva, Yufan He, Gregory Jensen, Holly Eckard, H. Peter Lu, Mikhail Zamkov
Tracking
the energy flow in nanoscale materials is an important
yet challenging goal. Experimental methods for probing the intermolecular
energy transfer (ET) are often burdened by the spectral crosstalk
between donor and acceptor species, which complicates unraveling their
individual contributions. This issue is particularly prominent in
inorganic nanoparticles and biological macromolecules featuring broad
absorbing profiles. Here, we demonstrate a general spectroscopic strategy
for measuring the ET efficiency between nanostructured or molecular
dyes exhibiting a significant donor–acceptor spectral overlap.
The reported approach is enabled through spectral shaping of the broadband
excitation light with solutions of donor molecules, which inhibits
the excitation of respective donor species in the sample. The resulting
changes in the acceptor emission induced by the spectral modulation
of the excitation beam are then used to determine the quantum efficiency
and the rate of ET processes between arbitrary fluorophores (molecules,
nanoparticles, polymers) with high accuracy. The feasibility of the
reported method was demonstrated using a control donor–acceptor
system utilizing a protein-bridged Cy3-Cy5 dye pair and subsequently
applied for studying the energy flow in a CdSe560-CdSe600 binary nanocrystal film.