A photonic wire is a molecular device that conveys excited-state energy from an input to an output unit. 1,2 In contrast to conductive nanowires, photonic wires are addressable at a distance without the need of physical contacts. In 1994, Lindsay and co-workers realized the first molecular photonic wire based on conjugated porphyrin arrays. 1 However, strongly coupling porphyrin arrays exhibit the disadvantage of forming so-called energy sinks due to different local interactions of the chromophores. 3 Furthermore, as molecular photonic wires have to operate at the single molecule level they have to be studied at this individual level as well. Therefore, the chromophores used have to exhibit special spectroscopic characteristics, such as high photostability and fluorescence quantum yield. The ideal photonic wire consists of a very regular arrangement of chromophores which allows for efficient energy transfer but prevents alterations of photophysical properties of the individual chromophores, resulting in the formation of energy sinks.In this communication, we report on the development of a molecular photonic wire based on (i) the use of conventional chromophores with high fluorescence quantum yield, (ii) an energy cascade as the driving force for the excited-state energy to ensure unidirectionality, and (iii) an arrangement of the chromophores such that strong electronic interactions promoting fluorescence quenching are prevented. Because of the unique molecular recognition properties and the scaffoldlike structure, double-stranded DNA constitutes an ideally suited building block on which to base the construction of nanoscale molecular devices. In addition, the use of DNA offers many well-developed labeling and post-labeling strategies to introduce a variety of different chromophores in a modular conception, i.e., short oligonucleotides carrying the desired chromophores can be selectively hybridized to a complementary template strand (Figure 1). The resulting wire is addressed by excitation of the primary donor, which transfers excited-state energy according to Förster theory 4 by weak dipole-dipole induced chromophore interactions through the transmitter chromophores to the final acceptor. The acceptor releases the transferred energy by emission of a fluorescence photon.To realize a unidirectional photonic wire based on multistep fluorescence resonance energy transfer, five different chromophores were attached covalently to single-stranded DNA fragments of various lengths (60 or 20 bases). Hybridization of the labeled DNA fragments results in a double-stranded 60 base pair (bp) DNA construct containing five chromophores at well-defined positions and distances. To ensure highly efficient fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) without quenching electronic interactions, an interchromophore distance of 10 bp corresponding to 3.4 nm was used. 6 The overall spatial range covered by this photonic wire is 13.6 nm. The spectral range comprises more than 200 nm of the visible spectrum, starting from ∼488 to ∼700 nm...
Molecular photonics is a new emerging field of research around the premise that it is possible to develop optical devices using single molecules as building blocks. Truly technological impact in the field requires focussed efforts on designing functional molecular devices as well as having access to their photonic properties on an individual basis. In this Minireview we discuss our approach towards the design and single-molecule investigation of one-dimensional multimolecular arrays intended to work as molecular photonic wires. Three different schemes have been explored: a) perylene-based dimer and trimer arrays displaying coherent exciton delocalisation at room temperature; b) DNA-based unidirectional molecular wires containing up to five different chromophores and exhibiting weak excitonic interactions between neighbouring dyes; and c) one-dimensional multichromophoric polymers based on perylene polyisocyanides showing excimerlike emission. As a whole, our single-molecule data show the importance of well-defined close packing of chromophores for obtaining optimal excitonic behaviour at room temperature. Further improvement on (bio)chemical synthesis, together with the use of single-molecule techniques, should lead in the near future to efficient and reliable photonic wires with true device functionality.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.