| Literature DB >> 32936612 |
Maja Colautti1,2, Francesco S Piccioli1, Zoran Ristanović3, Pietro Lombardi1,2, Amin Moradi3, Subhasis Adhikari3, Irena Deperasinska4, Boleslaw Kozankiewicz4, Michel Orrit3, Costanza Toninelli1,2.
Abstract
The local interaction of charges and light in organic solids is the basis of distinct and fundamental effects. We here observe, at the single-molecule scale, how a focused laser beam can locally shift by hundreds of times their natural line width and, in a persistent way, the transition frequency of organic chromophores cooled at liquid helium temperature in different host matrices. Supported by quantum chemistry calculations, the results can be interpreted as effects of a photoionization cascade, leading to a stable electric field, which Stark-shifts the molecular electronic levels. The experimental observation is then applied to a common challenge in quantum photonics, i.e., the independent tuning and synchronization of close-by quantum emitters, which is desirable for multiphoton experiments. Five molecules that are spatially separated by about 50 μm and originally 20 GHz apart are brought into resonance within twice their line width. This tuning method, which does not require additional fabrication steps, is here independently applied to multiple emitters, with an emission line width that is only limited by the spontaneous decay and an inhomogeneous broadening limited to 1 nm. The system hence shows promise for photonic quantum technologies.Keywords: Stark shift; optical tuning; organic semiconductors; single molecule; single-photon sources
Year: 2020 PMID: 32936612 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c05620
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881