| Literature DB >> 30262905 |
Ryo Nakagomi1, Kazuharu Uchiyama2, Hirotsugu Suzui2, Eri Hatano3, Kingo Uchida3, Makoto Naruse4, Hirokazu Hori2.
Abstract
We observed nanometre-scale optical near-field induced photoisomerization on the surface of a photochromic diarylethene crystal via molecular structural changes using an optical near-field assisted atomic force microscope. A nanometre-scale concavity was formed on the sample surface due to locally induced photoisomerization. By using this optical near-field induced local photoisomerization, we succeeded in generating a pattern of alphabet characters on the surface of the diarylethene crystal below the optical wavelength scale. Further, by exploiting the photochromism of the investigated material, erasure of the generated pattern was also confirmed, where the evolution of the pattern during erasure depended on the local spatial characteristics of the crystal. These experimental findings demonstrate the fundamental abilities of photochromic crystals in dynamic memorization in nanometre-scale light-matter interactions.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30262905 PMCID: PMC6160423 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-32862-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Experimental setup. (a) Molecular structures of DAE-o and DAE-c. (b) Absorption spectral changes of DAE-o in hexane (3.27 × 10−5 m). Absorption spectrum of DAE-o (solid line), DAE-c (broken line). (c) Observed crystal surface and molecular packing of two conformers in a unit cell. (d) Local excitation of the photochromic crystal by the optical near-field generated at the AFM probe tip. The laser light (wavelength: 670 nm) irradiated onto the upper surface of the cantilever was diffracted and reflected toward the tip and locally enhanced. (e) Concavity formation on the crystal surface by near-field optical excitation near the probe tip. The crystal surface is locally recessed, where the depth is proportional to the volume of the photoisomerized region.
Figure 2Effects of optical near-field excitation on a photochromic crystal. (a) Optical microscope image of the initial state of the crystal. The broken line shows the position of the cantilever. (b) AFM image of the crystal surface before local excitation. (c) AFM image after local excitation at the centre. (d) Line profile obtained along the white line in (c).
Figure 3Local photoisomerization in a slightly coloured photochromic crystal. (a) Optical microscope image of the initial state of the crystal. (b) AFM image of the crystal surface after local excitation. (c) Line profile obtained along the white line in (b). (d) Mechanical distortion due to molecular structural change via local photoisomerization.
Figure 4Photoisomerization pattern formation on a photochromic crystal surface by near-field optical excitation. (a) Trajectories of local optical excitations. (b) AFM image of the crystal surface with ‘UY’ drawn. (c) Three-dimensional image.
Figure 5Dynamic erasing of nanometre-scale patterns formed on a photochromic crystal. (a) Sequential AFM images of the surface where the ‘UY’ pattern was formed. The number under each image is the number of that frame in the series. (b) Line profile obtained along the white line in the 10th frame.