| Literature DB >> 24317283 |
Igor I Vlasov1, Andrey A Shiryaev2, Torsten Rendler3, Steffen Steinert3, Sang-Yun Lee3, Denis Antonov3, Márton Vörös4, Fedor Jelezko5, Anatolii V Fisenko6, Lubov F Semjonova6, Johannes Biskupek7, Ute Kaiser7, Oleg I Lebedev8, Ilmo Sildos9, Philip R Hemmer10, Vitaly I Konov1, Adam Gali11, Jörg Wrachtrup3.
Abstract
Doping of carbon nanoparticles with impurity atoms is central to their application. However, doping has proven elusive for very small carbon nanoparticles because of their limited availability and a lack of fundamental understanding of impurity stability in such nanostructures. Here, we show that isolated diamond nanoparticles as small as 1.6 nm, comprising only ∼400 carbon atoms, are capable of housing stable photoluminescent colour centres, namely the silicon vacancy (SiV). Surprisingly, fluorescence from SiVs is stable over time, and few or only single colour centres are found per nanocrystal. We also observe size-dependent SiV emission supported by quantum-chemical simulation of SiV energy levels in small nanodiamonds. Our work opens the way to investigating the physics and chemistry of molecular-sized cubic carbon clusters and promises the application of ultrasmall non-perturbative fluorescent nanoparticles as markers in microscopy and sensing.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24317283 DOI: 10.1038/nnano.2013.255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Nanotechnol ISSN: 1748-3387 Impact factor: 39.213