Abstract
A hallmark of quantum control is the ability to manipulate quantum emission at the nanoscale. Through scanning tunneling microscopy-induced luminescence (STML), we are able to generate plasmonic light originating from inelastic tunneling processes that occur in the vacuum between a tip and a few-nanometer-thick molecular film of C60 deposited on Ag(111). Single photon emission, not of molecular excitonic origin, occurs with a 1/e recovery time of a tenth of a nanosecond or less, as shown through Hanbury Brown and Twiss photon intensity interferometry. Tight-binding calculations of the electronic structure for the combined tip and Ag-C60 system results in good agreement with experiment. The tunneling happens through electric-field-induced split-off states below the C60 LUMO band, which leads to a Coulomb blockade effect and single photon emission. The use of split-off states is shown to be a general technique that has special relevance for narrowband materials with a large bandgap.
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Leon, C. C., Gunnarsson, O., de Oteyza, D. G., Rosławska, A., Merino, P., Grewal, A., … Kern, K. (2020). Single Photon Emission from a Plasmonic Light Source Driven by a Local Field-Induced Coulomb Blockade. ACS Nano, 14(4), 4216–4223. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.9b09299
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