Event Details
Speaker Name
Ben Eller
Speaker Institution
JQI
Start Date & Time
2024-09-13 12:00 pm
Semester
Event Details

Abstract: Quantum confinement significantly influences the excited states of sub-10 nm single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs), crucial for advancements in transistor technology and the development of novel opto-electronic materials such as fluorescent ultrashort nanotubes (FUNs). However, the length dependence of this effect in ultrashort SWCNTs is not yet fully understood in the context of the SWCNT exciton states. Here, we conduct excited state calculations using time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) on geometry-optimized models of ultrashort SWCNTs and FUNs, which consist of ultrashort SWCNTs with $sp^3$ defects. Our results reveal a length dependent scaling law of the $E_{11}$ exciton energy that can be understood through a geometric, dimensional argument, and which departs from the length scaling of a 1D particle-in-a-box. We find that this scaling law applies to ultrashort (6,5) and (6,6) SWCNTs, as well as models of (6,5) FUNs. In contrast, the defect-induced $E_{sp^3}$ transition, which is redshifted from the $E_{11}$ optical gap transition, demonstrates little dependence on the nanotube length, even in the shortest possible SWCNTs. We attribute this relative lack of length dependence to orbital localization around the quantum defect installed near the SWCNT edge. Our results illustrate the complex interplay of defects and quantum confinement effects in ultrashort SWCNTs and provide a foundation for further explorations of these nanoscale phenomena.

Pizza and drinks will be served after the seminar in ATL 2117.
 

Location
ATL 2324
Misc
Groups