Electrically driven single-photon emission from an isolated single molecule

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Abstract

Electrically driven molecular light emitters are considered to be one of the promising candidates as single-photon sources. However, it is yet to be demonstrated that electrically driven single-photon emission can indeed be generated from an isolated single molecule notwithstanding fluorescence quenching and technical challenges. Here, we report such electrically driven single-photon emission from a well-defined single molecule located inside a precisely controlled nanocavity in a scanning tunneling microscope. The effective quenching suppression and nanocavity plasmonic enhancement allow us to achieve intense and stable single-molecule electroluminescence. Second-order photon correlation measurements reveal an evident photon antibunching dip with the single-photon purity down to g (2)(0) = 0.09, unambiguously confirming the single-photon emission nature of the single-molecule electroluminescence. Furthermore, we demonstrate an ultrahigh-density array of identical single-photon emitters.

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Zhang, L., Yu, Y. J., Chen, L. G., Luo, Y., Yang, B., Kong, F. F., … Hou, J. G. (2017). Electrically driven single-photon emission from an isolated single molecule. Nature Communications, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-00681-7

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