Atomically Thin Boron Nitride as an Ideal Spacer for Metal-Enhanced Fluorescence

2019 
The metal-enhanced fluorescence (MEF) considerably enhances the luminescence for various applications, but its performance largely depends on the dielectric spacer between the fluorophore and plasmonic source. It is still challenging to produce a pinhole-free spacer having an optimized thickness with a subnanometer accuracy that enables reusability without affecting the enhancement. In this study, we demonstrate the use of atomically thin hexagonal boron nitride (BN) as an ideal MEF spacer owing to its multifold advantages over the traditional dielectric thin films. With rhodamine 6G as a representative fluorophore, it largely improves the enhancement factor (up to ~ 95 ± 5), sensitivity (10−8 M), reproducibility, and reusability (~90% of the plasmonic activity is retained after 30 cycles of heating at 350 °C in air) of MEF. This can be attributed to its two-dimensional structure, thickness control at the atomic level, pinhole-free quality, high affinities to aromatic fluorophores, good thermal stability,...
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