Single-molecule experiment
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A single-molecule experiment investigates the properties of a single individual molecule that can be isolated or distinguished for the purpose of an experiment or analysis. Single-molecule studies may be contrasted with measurements on an ensemble or bulk collection of molecules, where the individual behaviour can not be distinguished, and only average characteristics can be measured. Although most measurement techniques are not sensitive enough to observe single molecules, single-molecule fluorescence has emerged as a useful tool for probing various processes which cannot be fully understood on the bulk level, such as the movement of myosin on actin filaments in muscle tissue or the details of individual local environments in solids. In the gas phase at ultralow pressures, single-molecule experiments have been around for decades, but in the condensed phase only in the last 20 years with the groundbreaking work by W. E. Moerner and Michel Orrit has it seen fruition.
[edit] Single-molecule effects
[edit] Single-molecule techniques
- Microscopy
- Fluorescence
- Fluorescence resonance energy transfer
- Force spectroscopy
- Magnetic tweezers
- Optical tweezers
- Raman spectroscopy (Surface Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy)
- SPM imaging
- electron microscopy
- single-molecule spectroscopy