Abstract

Colloidal semiconductor quantum dots are attractive fluorophores for multicolor imaging because of broad absorption and narrow emission spectra, and they are brighter and far more photostable than organic dyes. However, severe intermittence in emission (also known as blinking) has been universally observed from single dots and has been considered an intrinsic limitation difficult to overcome. This is unfortunate because growing applications in spectroscopy of single biological molecules and quantum information processing using single photon sources could greatly benefit from long-lasting and nonblinking single-molecule emitters. For instance, in a recent application of single-dot imaging, the tracking of membrane receptors was interrupted frequently due to the stroboscopic nature of recording. Blinking can also reduce the brightness in ensemble imaging via signal saturation. Here we show that the quantum dot blinking can be suppressed with the emission duty cycle approaching 100% while maintaining biocompatibility.

Keywords

Quantum dotChemistryPhotonBrightnessNanotechnologyOptoelectronicsQuantumSpectroscopyOpticsPhysicsMaterials science

MeSH Terms

Biocompatible MaterialsBiotinylationCadmium CompoundsColloidsMercaptoethanolQuantum DotsSelenium CompoundsSemiconductorsSerum AlbuminBovineStreptavidinSulfidesZinc Compounds

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Publication Info

Year
2004
Type
article
Volume
126
Issue
5
Pages
1324-1325
Citations
509
Access
Closed

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509
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6
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Cite This

Sungchul Hohng, Taekjip Ha (2004). Near-Complete Suppression of Quantum Dot Blinking in Ambient Conditions. Journal of the American Chemical Society , 126 (5) , 1324-1325. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja039686w

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/ja039686w
PMID
14759174

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%