Abstract
Single-molecule fluorescence spectroscopy is a powerful tool to investigate the physical properties of individual molecules. Yet, elucidating the fast fluctuation dynamics of freely diffusing single molecules in solution at room temperature, where a variety of chemical and biological processes occur, remains challenging. In this study, we report on fluorescence excitation correlation spectroscopy (FECS) of room-temperature solutions, which enables the study of spontaneous fluctuation of the excitation spectrum with microsecond time resolution. By employing Fourier transform spectroscopy with broadband femtosecond pulses and time-correlated single-photon counting, we achieved fluorescence excitation spectroscopy of a room-temperature solution at the single-molecule level. Building upon this single-molecule measurement, we obtained an excitation wavelength-resolved fluorescence autocorrelation function in the microsecond to millisecond range, demonstrating the potential of this method to elucidate fast, spontaneous, time-dependent changes of excitation spectra in statistically equilibrium systems. With further development, this method will allow the study of spectral exchange associated with transitions between sub-ensembles of solution-phase molecules with unprecedented time resolution.
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