Distortion of power law blinking with binning and thresholding

Fluorescence intermittency is a random switching between emitting (on) and non-emitting (off) periods found for many single chromophores such as semiconductor quantum dots and organic molecules. The statistics of the duration of on- and off-periods are commonly determined by thresholding the emissio...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Journal of chemical physics Vol. 140; no. 11; p. 114306
Main Authors Amecke, Nicole, Heber, André, Cichos, Frank
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 21.03.2014
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Summary:Fluorescence intermittency is a random switching between emitting (on) and non-emitting (off) periods found for many single chromophores such as semiconductor quantum dots and organic molecules. The statistics of the duration of on- and off-periods are commonly determined by thresholding the emission time trace of a single chromophore and appear to be power law distributed. Here we test with the help of simulations if the experimentally determined power law distributions can actually reflect the underlying statistics. We find that with the experimentally limited time resolution real power law statistics with exponents α(on/off) ≳ 1.6, especially if α(on) ≠ α(off) would not be observed as such in the experimental data after binning and thresholding. Instead, a power law appearance could simply be obtained from the continuous distribution of intermediate intensity levels. This challenges much of the obtained data and the models describing the so-called power law blinking.
ISSN:1089-7690
DOI:10.1063/1.4868252