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Bright
Future for Nano-sized Light Source
06/28/07
In
a demonstration of the nanowire light source’s
fluorescence mode, a nanowire in the grip of an infrared
beam was touched to a fluorescent bead causing the bead to
fluorescence orange at the contact point. Figure a shows the
experimental set up with the pair of beads on the right as
control; b is a bright-field optical image of the beads,
with the nanowire in contact with the leftmost bead; c is a
color CCD fluorescence image showing green light emission
from the nanowire and the orange emission from the bead; d
is a control image of the same beads with infrared radiation
but no trapped nanowire; and e is digital subtraction of d
from c.
Credit:
Berkeley
Lab
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A bio-friendly nano-sized
light source capable of emitting coherent light across the
visible spectrum, has been invented by a team of researchers with
the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory, and the University of California at Berkeley. Among
the many potential applications of this nano-sized light source,
once the technology is refined, are single cell endoscopy and
other forms of subwavelength bio-imaging, integrated circuitry
for nanophotonic technology, and new advanced methods of cyber
cryptography.
“Working with individual
nanowires, we’ve developed the first electrode-free,
continuously tunable coherent visible light source that’s
compatible with physiological environments,” said chemist
Peidong Yang, one of the principal investigators behind this
project, and a leading nanoscience authority who holds joint
appointments with Berkeley Lab’s Molecular Foundry and
Materials Sciences Division, and the UC Berkeley Chemistry
Department.
“We’ve also
demonstrated that it is possible to trap and manipulate single
nanowires with optical tweezers, a critical capability not only
for bio-imaging but also for wiring together nanophotonic
circuitry.”
Jan Liphardt, a biophysicist
who holds a joint appointment with Berkeley Lab's Physical
Biosciences Division and UC Berkeley’s Physics Department,
was another principal investigator for this research.
“This nanowire light
source is like having a tiny flashlight that we can potentially
scan across a living cell, visualizing the cell while
mechanically interacting with it,” Liphardt said.
Yang and Liphardt were among
the co-authors of a paper that is featured on the cover of the
June 28, 2007 edition of the journal Nature.
The paper is entitled: “Tunable Nanowire Nonlinear Optical
Probe.” Other authors of the paper were Yuri Nakayama,
Peter Pauzauskie, Aleksandra Radenovic, Robert Onorato and
Richard Saykally.
In this paper, the researchers
describe a technique in which nanowires of potassium niobate were
synthesized in a special hot water solution and separated using
ultrasound. The wires were highly uniform in size, several
microns long, but only about 50 nanometers in diameter. A beam
from an infrared laser was used to create an optical trap that
allowed individual nanowires to be grabbed and manipulated.
Because of potassium niobate’s unique optical properties,
this same beam of infrared laser light also served as an optical
pump, causing the nanowires to emit visible light whose color
could be selected. In a demonstration of the technique’s
potential, these nanowire light sources were used to generate
fluorescence from specially treated beads.
“Our potassium niobate
nanowires have diameters that are substantially below the
wavelengths of visible light,” said Yang. “They also
have excellent electronic and optical properties, and low
toxicity, plus they are chemically stable at room temperatures.
This makes them ideal for subwavelength laser and imaging
technology.”
“In microscopy, the
general rule has always been that you can look at an object or
you can touch it,” said Liphardt. “With our nanowire
light source technology, we combine both these capabilities in a
single device. This opens up the possibility of being able to
manipulate a specimen as you visualize it.”
Central to the success of the
nanowire light source are the exceptional nonlinear optical
properties of potassium niobate. These nonlinear properties
enable the frequencies of the incoming infrared light to be mixed
or doubled, through techniques known respectively as second
harmonic generation (SHG) or sum frequency generation (SFG),
before being emitted as visible light. The result is light that
is tunable as well as coherent, which fulfills a technological
requirement that has posed a major challenge for both
photo-imaging and photo-detection in subwavelength optics.
Coupled with earlier projects
in which Yang and his research group created ultraviolet nanowire
nanolasers, and made nanoribbon optical waveguides that can
channel and direct light through circuitry, the new nanowire
light source lays firm groundwork for future nanophotonic
technology. Photonics, a technology in which the movement of
light waves replaces the movement of electrons as information
carriers, promises computers and networks that are thousands of
times faster than what we have today.
“Lasers, waveguides,
non-linear optical converters and photodetectors are all
important components for photonic technology,” said Yang.
“A full-fledged nanophotonic technology will require these
elements to create integrated nanophotonic circuitry. They are
also quite important for other applications such as lab-on-a-chip
technologies or quantum cryptography.”
Bio-imaging
may be the field in which this nanowire light source technology
has its biggest impact. Optical or visible light microscopy
remains at the forefront of biological research because it allows
scientists to study living cells and tissues. However, whereas
the resolution of optical microscopy is limited by diffraction,
through subwavelength techniques it becomes possible to visualize
features smaller than visible light wavelengths. For biology,
this brings normally invisible subcellular structures into view.
“We hypothesized that a
single potassium niobate nanowire would, when optically trapped,
be able to double the frequency of the trapping light and then
waveguide this locally generated light to its ends, thereby
enabling the development of a novel form of scanning light
microscopy,” said Liphardt. “In addition to
demonstrating this scanning transmission mode, we also
demonstrated a fluorescence mode.”
When a nanowire light source
was touched to a fluorescent bead, the bead emitted a distinct
orange fluorescence at the contact point. When the nanowire was
removed, the orange fluorescence was immediately reduced 80-fold,
confirming that the nanowire was the predominant source of
fluorescent excitation.
“The work shows that we
can create and operate coherent bio-friendly nanoscale light
sources in liquid environments and use them for subwavelength
imaging,” said Yang. “The next direction we would
like to push is single cell endoscopy, in which we use these
nanoscale light source and subwavelength waveguides to do high
resolution imaging inside the individual cell. The ability to
monitor processes within living cells should greatly improve our
fundamental understanding of cell functions, intracellular
physiological processes, and cellular signal pathways.”
Yang and Liphardt caution that
the nanowire light source technology is at a very early stage of
development. Liphardt compares it to where atomic force
microscopy was some 10 years ago. He also says that this
technology is not intended to replace existing microscopy
technologies, but will enable researchers to do things that
cannot be done with current technology.
“Still, this nanowire
light source technology, if developed to its full potential,
could yield an embarrassment of riches in new knowledge,”
Liphardt said.
This work was supported by the
Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials
Science of the U.S. Department of Energy, and by the Dreyfus
Foundation, the University of California, Berkeley, the
Experimental Physical Chemistry Program of the National Science
Foundation, and NASA.
Berkeley Lab is a U.S.
Department of Energy national laboratory located in Berkeley,
California. It conducts unclassified scientific research and is
managed by the University of California.
Source:
Berkeley Lab

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