We study the creation of fluorescence patterns inside a gelatin gel by way of two-photon photoactivation of 7-azido-4-trifluoromethyl-1,2-benzopyrone (azidocomarin 151) contained in the gel matrix. As ultrafast light pulses are focused into the gel, onset of two-photon fluorescence, highly nonlinear in the applied optical power, is observed as azidocoumarin is converted into a fluorescent dye that binds to the gelatin. We fit the time dependence of the fluorescence to a model that incorporates the competition between coumarin photoactivation and photobleaching as well as the gradual degradation of the gel when it is exposed to the high intensity laser light.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe process of spontaneous emission can be dramatically modified by optical microstructures and nanostructures. We have studied the modification of fluorescence dynamics using a variable thickness polymer spacer layer fabricated using layer-by-layer self-assembly with nanometer accuracy. The change in fluorescence lifetime with spacer layer thickness agrees well with theoretical predictions based on the modified photonic density of states (PDOS), and yields consistent values for the fluorophores' intrinsic fluorescence lifetime and quantum yield near a dielectric as well as a plasmonic interface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe a lithographic method for directly patterning the adhesive properties of amine-rich layer-by-layer assembled polymer films, useful for positioning metal and other nanostructures. The adhesive properties of the films are sufficiently robust that the films can be patterned with standard as opposed to soft lithographic methods. We perform the patterning with a lithographically defined evaporated aluminum mask which protects selected regions of the substrate, passivating adhesion in the exposed regions with acetic anhydride.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConvective (or evaporation-induced) self-assembly is a standard technique for depositing uniform, poly-crystalline coatings of nanospheres across multiple square centimeters on the timescale of minutes. In this paper, we present a variation of this technique, where the drying meniscus is restricted by a straight-edge located approximately 100 microm above the substrate adjacent to the drying zone. Surprisingly, we find this technique to yield films at roughly twice the growth rate compared to the standard technique.
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