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      Enhanced two-photon photoluminescence assisted by multi-resonant characteristics of a gold nanocylinder

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          Abstract

          Multi-resonant plasmonic simple geometries like nanocylinders and nanorods are highly interesting for two-photon photoluminescence and second harmonic generation applications, due to their easy fabrication and reproducibility in comparison with complex multi-resonant systems like dimers or nanoclusters. We demonstrate experimentally that by using a simple gold nanocylinder we can achieve a double resonantly enhanced two-photon photoluminescence of quantum dots, by matching the excitation wavelength of the quantum dots with a dipolar plasmon mode, while the emission is coupled with a radiative quadrupolar mode. We establish a method to separate experimentally the enhancement factor at the excitation and at the emission wavelengths for this double resonant system. The sensitivity of the spectral positions of the dipolar and quadrupolar plasmon resonances to the ellipticity of the nanocylinders and its impact on the two-photon photoluminescence enhancement are discussed.

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          Enhancement and Quenching of Single-Molecule Fluorescence

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            Deep tissue two-photon microscopy.

            With few exceptions biological tissues strongly scatter light, making high-resolution deep imaging impossible for traditional-including confocal-fluorescence microscopy. Nonlinear optical microscopy, in particular two photon-excited fluorescence microscopy, has overcome this limitation, providing large depth penetration mainly because even multiply scattered signal photons can be assigned to their origin as the result of localized nonlinear signal generation. Two-photon microscopy thus allows cellular imaging several hundred microns deep in various organs of living animals. Here we review fundamental concepts of nonlinear microscopy and discuss conditions relevant for achieving large imaging depths in intact tissue.
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              Tabulated values of the Shockley–Queisser limit for single junction solar cells

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nanophotonics
                Walter de Gruyter GmbH
                2192-8614
                2192-8606
                September 11 2020
                July 09 2020
                September 04 2020
                September 11 2020
                July 09 2020
                September 04 2020
                : 9
                : 12
                : 4009-4019
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Laboratory Light, Nanomaterials & Nanotechnologies – L2n, University of Technology of Troyes & CNRS ERL 7004 , 12 rue Marie Curie, 10000 , Troyes , France
                [2 ]Institut Interdisciplinaire d’Innovation Technologique (3IT), Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Québec J1K 0A5, Canada; Laboratoire Nanotechnologies Nanosystèmes (LN2) – CNRS UMI-3463 – 3IT , Sherbrooke , Québec J1K 0A5 , Canada
                [3 ]Institute of Physical and Theoretical Chemistry and Center LISA , Eberhard Karls University Tübingen , Auf der Morgenstelle 18, 72076 , Tübingen , Germany
                [4 ]Institute for Applied Physics and Center LISA , Eberhard Karls University Tübingen , Auf der Morgenstelle 10, 72076 , Tübingen , Germany
                Article
                10.1515/nanoph-2020-0213
                a08724c6-d1b4-4021-a57f-3eeaae6cff55
                © 2020

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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