CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- A powerful new tool for probing molecular structure on surfaces
has been developed by researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Single molecule absorption spectroscopy can enhance molecular analysis, surface
manipulation and studies of molecular energy and reactivity at the atomic level.
"This new measurement method combines the chemical
selectivity of optical absorption spectroscopy with
the atomic-scale resolution of scanning tunneling
microscopy," said Martin Gruebele, a professor of
chemistry, physics and biophysics and corresponding
author of a paper accepted for publication in the
journal Nano Letters, and posted on its Web site. "The
method literally feels how a molecule changes shape
when it absorbs energy."
Unlike single molecule fluorescence spectroscopy,
which is now a commonly used measurement technique,
single molecule absorption spectroscopy has been
an elusive goal.
"Single molecules don't absorb much light, making
detection difficult to begin with," said Gruebele,
who also is a researcher at the university's Beckman
Institute for Advanced Science and Technology. "An
even bigger problem, however, is that light-induced
heating in the sample and in the microscope tip can
produce so much noise that the signal is lost."
To reduce the noise, the researchers combined several
special techniques -- each insufficient by itself
-- into a method that allows them to detect single
molecule absorption under laser illumination by scanning
tunneling microscopy.
"First, the sample molecule is placed on a transparent
silicon substrate," said Joseph Lyding, a professor
of electrical and computer engineering and a researcher
at the Beckman Institute. "Laser light will either
be absorbed by the sample or will pass through the
substrate with little or no heating effect. Second,
the tip-sample junction is illuminated through the
rear face of the substrate, significantly reducing
tip heating."
Modulating the laser light with a mechanical chopper
further reduces heating, Lyding said. A lock-in amplifier,
which switches on and off at the same rate as the
laser, filters out mechanical and electronic noise.
As a result, the absorbed energy causes a change
of shape in the electron density of the sample molecule,
and the scanning tunneling microscope then measures
that change of shape.
"Single molecule absorption spectroscopy is an extremely
sensitive technique for analytical chemistry, for
measuring electrical properties of molecules, and
for studying energy transfer on surfaces," Gruebele
said. "While most molecules don't fluoresce -- limiting
the usefulness of single molecule fluorescence spectroscopy
-- all molecules absorb, making single molecule absorption
spectroscopy a much more general approach."
Co-authors of the paper with Gruebele and Lyding
are postdoctoral researcher Joshua Ballard, graduate
students Erin Carmichael and Dongxia Shi (now at
the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing).
The National Science Foundation funded the work.
Contact: James E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
kloeppel@uiuc.edu
217-244-1073
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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