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Controllable strong interactions between a nanocavity and a single emitter is important to manipulating optical emission in a nanophotonic system but challenging to achieve. Herein a three-dimensional DNA origami, named as DNA rack (DR) is proposed and demonstrated to deterministically and precisely assemble single emitters within ultra-small plasmonic nanocavities formed by closely coupled gold nanorods (AuNRs). Uniquely, the DR is in a saddle shape, with two tubular grooves that geometrically allow a snug fit and linearly align two AuNRs with a bending angle < 10°. It also includes a spacer at the saddle point to maintain the gap between AuNRs as small as 2-3 nm, forming a nanocavity estimated to be 20 nm3 and an experimentally measured Q factor of 7.3. A DNA docking strand is designed at the spacer to position a single fluorescent emitter at nanometer accuracy within the cavity. Using Cy5 as a model emitter, a ~ 30-fold fluorescence enhancement and a significantly reduced emission lifetime (from 1.6 ns to 670 ps) were experimentally verified, confirming significant emitter-cavity interactions. This DR-templated assembly method is capable of fitting AuNRs of variable length-to-width aspect ratios to form anisotropic nanocavities and deterministically incorporate different single emitters, thus enabling flexible design of both cavity resonance and emission wavelengths to tailor light-matter interactions at nanometer scale.

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Publication history
Copyright
Acknowledgements

Publication history

Received: 04 May 2021
Revised: 06 June 2021
Accepted: 07 June 2021
Published: 06 August 2021
Issue date: February 2022

Copyright

© Tsinghua University Press and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2021

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements

Y. L. thanks the support from an Army Research Office MURI award no. W911NF-12-1-0420. C. W. thanks the ASU startup funds and National Science Foundation under grant Nos. 1711412, 1838443, and 1847324 for partially supporting this research. Y. Y. thanks the ASU startup funds and National Science Foundation under grant Nos. 1809997 for partially supporting this research.

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