Nanostructure-induced distortion in single-emitter microscopy
Kangmook Lim, Chad Ropp, John Fourkas, Benjamin Shapiro, Edo Waks

TL;DR
This paper investigates how metallic nanoparticles distort the far-field radiation patterns in single-emitter microscopy, revealing that dielectric effects dominate and enabling high-resolution imaging of nanostructures.
Contribution
It demonstrates that nanoparticle-induced distortions can be quantified using quantum dots, leading to improved super-resolution imaging techniques.
Findings
Quantum dots shift by over 35 nm near nanoparticles
Distortions are dominated by dielectric effects, not scattering
New method for high-precision nanoparticle imaging
Abstract
Single-emitter microscopy has emerged as a promising method of imaging nanostructures with nanoscale resolution. This technique uses the centroid position of an emitters far-field radiation pattern to infer its position to a precision that is far below the diffraction limit. However, nanostructures composed of high-dielectric materials such as noble metals can distort the far-field radiation pattern. Nanoparticles also exhibit a more complex range of distortions, because in addition to introducing a high dielectric surface, they also act as efficient scatterers. Thus, the distortion effects of nanoparticles in single-emitter microscopy remains poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that metallic nanoparticles can significantly distort the accuracy of single-emitter imaging at distances exceeding 300 nm. We use a single quantum dot to probe both the magnitude and the direction of the…
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