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Dive into the research topics where Guillermo P. Acuna is active.

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Featured researches published by Guillermo P. Acuna.


Science | 2012

Fluorescence Enhancement at Docking Sites of DNA-Directed Self-Assembled Nanoantennas

Guillermo P. Acuna; Friederike M. Möller; Phil Holzmeister; Susanne Beater; Birka Lalkens; Philip Tinnefeld

Building a Fluorescent Hotspot When two gold nanoparticles come close together, their overlapping plasmonic fields can create a region that acts as a nanoantenna that can enhance the fluorescent emission of a molecule. Acuna et al. (p. 506) used a surface-anchored DNA origami structure to assemble one or two gold nanoparticles next to a dye trapped within the structure. A > 100-fold enhancement in fluorescent emission was observed when the dye molecules were located in a 23-nm gap between two 100-nm gold nanoparticles. A DNA origami structure enhances the emission of a dye molecule by directing the proximate binding of gold nanoparticles. We introduce self-assembled nanoantennas to enhance the fluorescence intensity in a plasmonic hotspot of zeptoliter volume. The nanoantennas are prepared by attaching one or two gold nanoparticles (NPs) to DNA origami structures, which also incorporated docking sites for a single fluorescent dye next to one NP or in the gap between two NPs. We measured the dependence of the fluorescence enhancement on NP size and number and compare it to numerical simulations. A maximum of 117-fold fluorescence enhancement was obtained for a dye molecule positioned in the 23-nanometer gap between 100-nanometer gold NPs. Direct visualization of the binding and unbinding of short DNA strands, as well as the conformational dynamics of a DNA Holliday junction in the hotspot of the nanoantenna, show the compatibility with single-molecule assays.


ACS Nano | 2012

Distance Dependence of Single-Fluorophore Quenching by Gold Nanoparticles Studied on DNA Origami

Guillermo P. Acuna; Martina Bucher; Ingo H. Stein; Christian Steinhauer; Anton Kuzyk; Phil Holzmeister; Robert Schreiber; Alexander Moroz; Fernando D. Stefani; Tim Liedl; Friedrich C. Simmel; Philip Tinnefeld

We study the distance-dependent quenching of fluorescence due to a metallic nanoparticle in proximity of a fluorophore. In our single-molecule measurements, we achieve excellent control over structure and stoichiometry by using self-assembled DNA structures (DNA origami) as a breadboard where both the fluorophore and the 10 nm metallic nanoparticle are positioned with nanometer precision. The single-molecule spectroscopy method employed here reports on the co-localization of particle and dye, while fluorescence lifetime imaging is used to directly obtain the correlation of intensity and fluorescence lifetime for varying particle to dye distances. Our data can be well explained by exact calculations that include dipole-dipole orientation and distances. Fitting with a more practical model for nanosurface energy transfer yields 10.4 nm as the characteristic distance of 50% energy transfer. The use of DNA nanotechnology together with minimal sample usage by attaching the particles to the DNA origami directly on the microscope coverslip paves the way for more complex experiments exploiting dye-nanoparticle interactions.


Nano Letters | 2015

DNA Origami Nanoantennas with over 5000-fold Fluorescence Enhancement and Single-Molecule Detection at 25 μM.

Anastasiya Puchkova; Carolin Vietz; Enrico Pibiri; Bettina Wünsch; María Sanz Paz; Guillermo P. Acuna; Philip Tinnefeld

Optical nanoantennas are known to focus freely propagating light and reversely to mediate the emission of a light source located at the nanoantenna hotspot. These effects were previously exploited for fluorescence enhancement and single-molecule detection at elevated concentrations. We present a new generation of self-assembled DNA origami based optical nanoantennas with improved robustness, reduced interparticle distance, and optimized quantum-yield improvement to achieve more than 5000-fold fluorescence enhancement and single-molecule detection at 25 μM background fluorophore concentration. Besides outperforming lithographic optical antennas, DNA origami nanoantennas are additionally capable of incorporating single emitters or biomolecular assays at the antenna hotspot.


Optics Express | 2008

Surface plasmons in terahertz metamaterials

Guillermo P. Acuna; Stephan F. Heucke; F. Kuchler; Hou-Tong Chen; A. J. Taylor; Roland Kersting

We characterize terahertz metamaterials by applying apertureless near-field microscopy with a bandwidth that covers the entire spectral response of the structures. The observations agree with the interpretation of the fundamental mode of the metamaterial. But the high frequency resonance shows properties that deviate from the common interpretation. We show that the high frequency response is governed by surface Plasmon excitations, which have a comparable oscillator strength as the fundamental mode.


Nano Letters | 2014

Placing Individual Molecules in the Center of Nanoapertures

Stephan F. Heucke; Fabian Baumann; Guillermo P. Acuna; Philip M. D. Severin; Stefan W. Stahl; Mathias Strackharn; Ingo H. Stein; Philipp Altpeter; Philip Tinnefeld; Hermann E. Gaub

While nanophotonic devices are unfolding their potential for single-molecule fluorescence studies, metallic quenching and steric hindrance, occurring within these structures, raise the desire for site-specific immobilization of the molecule of interest. Here, we refine the single-molecule cut-and-paste technique by optical superresolution routines to immobilize single fluorescent molecules in the center of nanoapertures. By comparing their fluorescence lifetime and intensity to stochastically immobilized fluorophores, we characterize the electrodynamic environment in these nanoapertures and proof the nanometer precision of our loading method.


Nano Letters | 2014

Single-molecule positioning in zeromode waveguides by DNA origami nanoadapters.

Enrico Pibiri; Phil Holzmeister; Birka Lalkens; Guillermo P. Acuna; Philip Tinnefeld

Nanotechnology is challenged by the need to connect top-down produced nanostructures with the bottom-up world of chemistry. A nanobiotechnological prime example is the positioning of single polymerase molecules in small holes in metal films, so-called zeromode waveguides (ZMWs), which is required for single-molecule real-time DNA sequencing. In this work, we present nanoadapters made of DNA (DNA origami) that match the size of the holes so that exactly one nanoadapter fits in each hole. By site-selective functionalization of the DNA origami nanoadapters, we placed single dye molecules in the ZMWs, thus optimizing the hole usage and improving the photophysical properties of dyes compared to stochastically immobilized molecules.


Nanosensing: Materials and Devices | 2004

Terahertz Near-Field Microscopy

Roland Kersting; Federico F. Buersgens; Guillermo P. Acuna; Gyu Cheon Cho

We report on apertureless terahertz (THz) microscopy and its application for semiconductor characterization. Extreme subwavelength resolutions down to 150nm are achieved with few-cycle THz pulses having a bandwidth of 3THz. The imaging mechanism is characterize by time-resolved THz techniques. We find that apertureless THz microscopy can be well described by the electronic resonance of the scanning-tip interacting with the sample’s surface. The capacitance between tip and surface is a key parameter, which provides insight into the local high frequency permittivity of the semiconductor structure. Applying electromodulation techniques allows for imaging electronic charge distributions in microstructured semiconductors. The sensitivity of THz microscopy suffices to detect as few as about 5000 electrons.


ACS Nano | 2017

Broadband Fluorescence Enhancement with Self-Assembled Silver Nanoparticle Optical Antennas

Carolin Vietz; Izabela Kaminska; María Sanz Paz; Philip Tinnefeld; Guillermo P. Acuna

Plasmonic structures are known to affect the fluorescence properties of dyes placed in close proximity. This effect has been exploited in combination with single-molecule techniques for several applications in the field of biosensing. Among these plasmonic structures, top-down zero-mode waveguides stand out due to their broadband capabilities. In contrast, optical antennas based on gold nanostructures exhibit fluorescence enhancement on a narrow fraction of the visible spectrum typically restricted to the red to near-infrared region. In this contribution, we exploit the DNA origami technique to self-assemble optical antennas based on large (80 nm) silver nanoparticles. We have studied the performance of these antennas with far- and near-field simulations and characterized them experimentally with single-molecule fluorescence measurements. We demonstrate that silver-based optical antennas can yield a fluorescence enhancement of more than 2 orders of magnitude throughout the visible spectral range for high intrinsic quantum yield dyes. Additionally, a comparison between the performance of gold and silver-based antennas is included. The results indicate that silver-based antennas strongly outperform their gold counterparts in the blue and green ranges and exhibit marginal differences in the red range. These characteristics render silver-based optical antennas ready for applications involving several fluorescently labeled species across the visible spectrum.


Optics Express | 2007

Millimeter wave probing of the acoustic phase for concealed object detection

Federico F. Buersgens; Guillermo P. Acuna; Roland Kersting

We developed a far infrared technique for detecting objects that are concealed behind a barrier, which is opaque for visible light. The technique makes use of the fact that mechanically coupled objects can be distinguished by their acoustic phase during a driven vibration. The pattern of the acoustic phase is imaged using 70 GHz radiation. The experimental data demonstrate that virtually all objects can be sensed, which includes metals as well as dielectric materials.


Nature Communications | 2017

Shifting molecular localization by plasmonic coupling in a single-molecule mirage

Mario Raab; Carolin Vietz; Fernando D. Stefani; Guillermo P. Acuna; Philip Tinnefeld

Over the last decade, two fields have dominated the attention of sub-diffraction photonics research: plasmonics and fluorescence nanoscopy. Nanoscopy based on single-molecule localization offers a practical way to explore plasmonic interactions with nanometre resolution. However, this seemingly straightforward technique may retrieve false positional information. Here, we make use of the DNA origami technique to both control a nanometric separation between emitters and a gold nanoparticle, and as a platform for super-resolution imaging based on single-molecule localization. This enables a quantitative comparison between the position retrieved from single-molecule localization, the true position of the emitter and full-field simulations. We demonstrate that plasmonic coupling leads to shifted molecular localizations of up to 30 nm: a single-molecule mirage.

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Philip Tinnefeld

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Carolin Vietz

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Birka Lalkens

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Phil Holzmeister

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Izabela Kaminska

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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Friederike M. Möller

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Fernando D. Stefani

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Aydogan Ozcan

University of California

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Daniel Shir

University of California

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Derek Tseng

University of California

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