Lakowicz Joseph R
Center for Fluorescence Spectroscopy, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Maryland at Baltimore, 725 West Lombard Street, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA.
Anal Biochem. 2005 Feb 15;337(2):171-94. doi: 10.1016/j.ab.2004.11.026.
Metallic particles and surfaces display diverse and complex optical properties. Examples include the intense colors of noble metal colloids, surface plasmon resonance absorption by thin metal films, and quenching of excited fluorophores near the metal surfaces. Recently, the interactions of fluorophores with metallic particles and surfaces (metals) have been used to obtain increased fluorescence intensities, to develop assays based on fluorescence quenching by gold colloids, and to obtain directional radiation from fluorophores near thin metal films. For metal-enhanced fluorescence it is difficult to predict whether a particular metal structure, such as a colloid, fractal, or continuous surface, will quench or enhance fluorescence. In the present report we suggest how the effects of metals on fluorescence can be explained using a simple concept, based on radiating plasmons (RPs). The underlying physics may be complex but the concept is simple to understand. According to the RP model, the emission or quenching of a fluorophore near the metal can be predicted from the optical properties of the metal structures as calculated from electrodynamics, Mie theory, and/or Maxwell's equations. For example, according to Mie theory and the size and shape of the particle, the extinction of metal colloids can be due to either absorption or scattering. Incident energy is dissipated by absorption. Far-field radiation is created by scattering. Based on our model small colloids are expected to quench fluorescence because absorption is dominant over scattering. Larger colloids are expected to enhance fluorescence because the scattering component is dominant over absorption. The ability of a metal's surface to absorb or reflect light is due to wavenumber matching requirements at the metal-sample interface. Wavenumber matching considerations can also be used to predict whether fluorophores at a given distance from a continuous planar surface will be emitted or quenched. These considerations suggest that the so called "lossy surface waves" which quench fluorescence are due to induced electron oscillations which cannot radiate to the far-field because wavevector matching is not possible. We suggest that the energy from the fluorophores thought to be lost by lossy surface waves can be recovered as emission by adjustment of the sample to allow wavevector matching. The RP model provides a rational approach for designing fluorophore-metal configurations with the desired emissive properties and a basis for nanophotonic fluorophore technology.
金属颗粒和表面呈现出多样而复杂的光学特性。例如包括贵金属胶体的强烈颜色、薄金属膜的表面等离子体共振吸收,以及金属表面附近激发荧光团的猝灭。最近,荧光团与金属颗粒及表面(金属)的相互作用已被用于获得增强的荧光强度、开发基于金胶体荧光猝灭的分析方法,以及在薄金属膜附近从荧光团获得定向辐射。对于金属增强荧光而言,很难预测特定的金属结构,如胶体、分形或连续表面,是会猝灭还是增强荧光。在本报告中,我们提出如何基于辐射等离子体(RP)这一简单概念来解释金属对荧光的影响。其背后的物理原理可能很复杂,但这个概念易于理解。根据RP模型,金属附近荧光团的发射或猝灭可根据从电动力学、米氏理论和/或麦克斯韦方程组计算出的金属结构的光学特性来预测。例如,根据米氏理论以及颗粒的大小和形状,金属胶体的消光可能是由于吸收或散射。入射能量通过吸收耗散。远场辐射由散射产生。基于我们的模型,预计小胶体将猝灭荧光,因为吸收比散射占主导。预计较大的胶体将增强荧光,因为散射分量比吸收占主导。金属表面吸收或反射光的能力归因于金属 - 样品界面处的波数匹配要求。波数匹配考量也可用于预测距连续平面表面给定距离处的荧光团是会发射还是猝灭。这些考量表明,所谓的猝灭荧光的“损耗表面波”是由于诱导电子振荡,由于无法实现波矢匹配,这些振荡无法辐射到远场。我们认为,被认为因损耗表面波而损失的荧光团能量可通过调整样品以实现波矢匹配而作为发射被回收。RP模型为设计具有所需发射特性的荧光团 - 金属构型提供了一种合理方法,并为纳米光子荧光团技术奠定了基础。