Just like our hands, chiral objects exist in two mirror forms that cannot be superimposed. The two chiral versions of an object are called enantiomers. Nature chose mostly chiral building blocks for biology using left-handed amino acids and right-handed sugars only. This fact trickles down to everyday chemicals in fragrances, flavors, or drugs. Detecting chirality in matter is thus of profound scientific and technological interest. The optical spectroscopy technique called circular dichroism (CD) can reveal chirality through a small difference in absorption for both circular polarizations of light, typically 3-5 orders of magnitude smaller than the measured light intensity. The application of CD spectroscopy is limited, however, by three challenges: 1) vanishing absorption for low molecular concentrations; 2) very small polarization contrast; 3) lack of spatial resolution.
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.