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Twisted bilayer graphene for enantiomeric sensing of chiral molecules

Authors :
Moreno, Álvaro
Cavicchi, Lorenzo
Wang, Xia
Peralta, Mayra
Vergniory, Maia
Watanabe, Kenji
Taniguchi, Takashi
Jarillo-Herrero, Pablo
Felser, Claudia
Polini, Marco
Koppens, Frank H. L.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Selective sensing of chiral molecules is a key aspect in fields spanning biology, chemistry, and pharmacology. However, conventional optical methods, such as circular dichroism (CD), encounter limitations owing to weak chiral light-matter interactions. Several strategies have been investigated to enhance CD or circularly polarised luminescence (CPL), including superchiral light, plasmonic nanoresonators and dielectric nanostructures. However, a compromise between spatial uniformity and high sensitivity, without requiring specific molecular functionalization, remains a challenge. In this work, we propose a novel approach using twisted bilayer graphene (TBG), a chiral 2D material with a strong CD peak which energy is tunable through the twist angle. By matching the CD resonance of TBG with the optical transition energy of the molecule, we achieve a decay rate enhancement mediated by resonant energy transfer that depends on the electric-magnetic interaction, that is, on the chirality of both the molecules and TBG. This leads to an enantioselective quenching of the molecule fluorescence, allowing to retrieve the molecule chirality from time-resolved photoluminescence measurements. This method demonstrates high sensitivity down to single layer of molecules, with the potential to achieve the ultimate goal of single-molecule chirality sensing, while preserving the spatial uniformity and integrability of 2D heterostructures.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2409.05178
Document Type :
Working Paper