Super interference fringes of two-photon photoluminescence in individual Au nanoparticles: the critical role of the intermediate state
Yao Li, Yonggang Yang, Chengbing Qin, Yunrui Song, Shuangping Han,, Guofeng Zhang, Ruiyun Chen, Jianyong Hu, Liantuan Xiao, and Suotang Jia

TL;DR
This study investigates ultrafast two-photon photoluminescence in individual gold nanoparticles, revealing super interference fringes and the critical role of intermediate states in their dynamics, with implications for nanophotonics applications.
Contribution
It demonstrates the first observation of super interference fringes in TPPL of gold nanoparticles and highlights the importance of intermediate states in ultrafast nanoparticle dynamics.
Findings
Two-orders-of-magnitude photoluminescence enhancement observed.
Nonlinearity transforms from 1 to 2 with interpulse delay.
Intermediate states critically influence ultrafast photoluminescence behavior.
Abstract
The interaction between light and metal nanoparticles enables investigations of microscopic phenomena on nanometer length and ultrashort time scales, benefiting from strong confinement and enhancement of the optical field. However, the ultrafast dynamics of these nanoparticles are primarily investigated by multiphoton photoluminescence on picoseconds or photoemission on femtoseconds independently. Here, we presented two-photon photoluminescence (TPPL) measurements on individual Au nanobipyramids (AuNP) to reveal their ultrafast dynamics by two-pulse excitation on a global time scale ranging from sub-femtosecond to tens of picoseconds. Two-orders-of-magnitude photoluminescence enhancement, namely super interference fringes, has been demonstrated on tens of femtoseconds. Power-dependent measurements uncovered the transform of the nonlinearity from 1 to 2 when the interpulse delay varied…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
