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arxiv: 1712.06501 · v1 · pith:UAQTGR6Unew · submitted 2017-12-18 · ⚛️ physics.chem-ph · physics.optics

Room-temperature ultrafast non-linear spectroscopy of a single molecule

classification ⚛️ physics.chem-ph physics.optics
keywords singlespectroscopymoleculeultrafastelectronicevolutionfirstmolecules
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Single molecule spectroscopy aims at unveiling often hidden but potentially very important contributions of single entities to a system's ensemble response. Albeit contributing tremendously to our ever growing understanding of molecular processes the fundamental question of temporal evolution, or change, has thus far been inaccessible, resulting in a static picture of a dynamic world. Here, we finally resolve this dilemma by performing the first ultrafast time-resolved transient spectroscopy on a single molecule. By tracing the femtosecond evolution of excited electronic state spectra of single molecules over hundreds of nanometres of bandwidth at room temperature we reveal their non-linear ultrafast response in an effective 3-pulse scheme with fluorescence detection. A first excitation pulse is followed by a phase-locked de-excitation pulse-pair, providing spectral encoding with 25 fs temporal resolution. This experimental realisation of true single molecule transient spectroscopy demonstrates that two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy of single molecules is experimentally in reach.

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