Alignment of Rod‐Shaped Single‐Photon Emitters Driven by Line Defects in Liquid Crystals |
| |
Authors: | Laurent Pelliser Mathieu Manceau Clotilde Lethiec Delphine Coursault Stefano Vezzoli Godefroy Leménager Laurent Coolen Massimo DeVittorio Ferruccio Pisanello Luigi Carbone Agnes Maitre Alberto Bramati Emmanuelle Lacaze |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. CNRS, UMR 7588, Institut des NanoSciences de Paris (INSP), Paris, France;2. Institut des NanoSciences de Paris (INSP), Sorbonne Universités, UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7588, Paris, France;3. Laboratoire Kastler Brossel, Collège de France, UPMC‐Sorbonne Universités, CNRS, ENS‐PSL Research University, Paris, France;4. Centre for Disruptive Photonic Technologies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore;5. Dipartimento di Ingegneria dell'Innovazione, Università del Salento, Lecce, Italy;6. Center for Biomolecular Nanotechnologies @Unile, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT), Lecce, Italy;7. National Nanotechnology Laboratory (NNL), CNR‐Istituto Nanoscienze, Lecce, Italy |
| |
Abstract: | Arrays of liquid crystal defects—linear smectic dislocations—are used to trap semiconductor CdSe/CdS dot‐in‐rods which behave as single‐photon emitters. Measurements of the emission diagram are combined together with measurements of the emitted polarization of the single emitters. It is shown that the dot‐in‐rods are confined parallel to the linear defects to allow for a minimization of the disorder energy associated with the dislocation cores. It is demonstrated that the electric dipoles associated with the dot‐in‐rods, tilted with respect to the rods, remain oriented in the plane including the smectic linear defects and perpendicular to the substrate, most likely due to dipole/dipole interactions between the dipoles of the liquid crystal molecules and those of the dot‐in‐rods. Using smectic dislocations, nanorods can consequently be oriented along a unique direction for a given substrate, independently of the ligands' nature, without any induced aggregation, leading as well to a fixed azimuthal orientation for the dot‐in‐rods' dipoles. These results open the way for the fine control of nanoparticle anisotropic optical properties, in particular, fine control of single‐photon emission polarization. |
| |
Keywords: | fluorescence liquid crystals nanorods oily streaks self‐alignment |
|
|