MRS Meetings and Events

 

NM02.06.02 2022 MRS Fall Meeting

Electroluminescence from Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes with Quantum Defects

When and Where

Nov 29, 2022
2:00pm - 2:30pm

Hynes, Level 2, Room 208

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Ralph Krupke1,2,Min-Ken Li1,2,Adnan Riaz1,2,Martina Wederhake3,Karin Fink1,Avishek Saha4,Simone Dehm1,Xiaowei He4,Friedrich Schöppler3,Manfred Kappes1,Han Htoon4,Valentin Popov5,Stephen Doorn4,Tobias Hertel3,Frank Hennrich1

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology1,Technische Universität Darmstadt2,Julius Maximilian University Würzburg3,Los Alamos National Laboratory4,University of Sofia5

Abstract

Ralph Krupke1,2,Min-Ken Li1,2,Adnan Riaz1,2,Martina Wederhake3,Karin Fink1,Avishek Saha4,Simone Dehm1,Xiaowei He4,Friedrich Schöppler3,Manfred Kappes1,Han Htoon4,Valentin Popov5,Stephen Doorn4,Tobias Hertel3,Frank Hennrich1

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology1,Technische Universität Darmstadt2,Julius Maximilian University Würzburg3,Los Alamos National Laboratory4,University of Sofia5
Individual single-walled carbon nanotubes with covalent sidewall defects have emerged as a new class of photon sources whose photoluminescence spectra can be tailored by the carbon nanotube chirality and the attached functional group/molecule. Here we present electroluminescence spectroscopy data from single-tube devices based on (7, 5) carbon nanotubes, functionalized with dichlorobenzene molecules, and wired to graphene electrodes. We observe electrically generated, defect-induced emissions that are controllable by electrostatic gating and strongly red-shifted compared to emissions from pristine nanotubes. The defect-induced emissions are assigned to excitonic and trionic recombination processes by correlating electroluminescence excitation maps with electrical transport and photoluminescence data. At cryogenic conditions additional, gate-dependent emission lines appear which are assigned to phonon-assisted hot-exciton electroluminescence from quasi-levels. Similar results were obtained with functionalized (6, 5) nanotubes. We also compare functionalized (7, 5) electroluminescence data with photoluminescence of pristine and functionalized (7, 5) nanotubes redox-doped using gold(III) chloride solution. This work shows that electroluminescence excitation is selective toward neutral defect-state configurations with the lowest transition energy, which in combination with gate-control over neutral versus charged defect-state emission leads to high spectral purity.<br/>Reference: Min-Ken Li et al., ACS Nano 2022 (doi: 10.1021/acsnano.2c03083)

Symposium Organizers

Yoke Khin Yap, Michigan Technological University
Tanja Kallio, Aalto University
Shunsuke Sakurai, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
Ming Zheng, National Institute of Standards and Technology

Symposium Support

Bronze
Nanoscale Horizons

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature