Periodic Reporting for period 3 - CHANSON (Chiral semiconductor nanophotonics for ultraresolved molecular sensing)
Período documentado: 2023-12-01 hasta 2025-05-31
This project tackles the challenge of increasing the sensitivity of chiral molecular detection using semiconductor nanophotonics through new contrast mechanisms relying on fluorescence instead of absorption. The project exploits two approaches based on nanophotonic and excitonic sensors around the following challenges:
A) Detecting the lowest possible concentration of chiral molecules, ultimately targeting the limit of a single molecule.
B) Exploiting excitons in atomically thin semiconductors as sensors for chiral sensing and nanoscale imaging.
We have developed nanofabrication recipes to produce monocrystalline silicon metasurfaces designed based on our theoretical predictions. We have characterized circular polarization in the near field of the nanostructures using polarized Raman spectroscopy. We have also constructed a polarization-resolved fluorescence microscope that allows us to do fine measurements of the degree of circular polarization of the emitted light. Finally, we have measured enhanced circularly polarized luminescence by chiral molecules using our silicon metasurfaces.
Regarding exciton-based nanoscale sensors, we observed localized fluorescence fluctuations in a monolayer semiconductor due to interaction with its environment. We adapted a fluctuation-based super-resolution technique to image localized exciton fluctuations in monolayer semiconductors and map disorder on the monolayer. We correlated the fluorescence fluctuations with features measured by atomic force microscopy and compared them with hyperspectral imaging data. We have combined monolayer semiconductors and chiral molecules towards the measurement of chirality through the polarization of the monolayer. Finally, we have fabricated and characterized WS2 and MoS2 nanostructures, both in the bulk and monolayer regimes.