2010 Annual Meeting
(658b) Exciton Antennae and Concentrators From Core-Shell and Corrugated Carbon Nanotube Filaments of Homogeneous Composition
Authors
Jae-Hee Han - Presenter, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Geraldine LC Paulus - Presenter, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Ryuichiro Maruyama - Presenter, Sony Corporation
Daniel A. Heller - Presenter, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Woo-Jae Kim - Presenter, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Paul W. Barone - Presenter, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Chang Young Lee - Presenter, Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST)
Moon-Ho Ham - Presenter, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Changsik Song - Presenter, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cristiano Fantini - Presenter, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
Michael S. Strano - Presenter, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
There has been renewed interest in solar concentrators and optical antennae for improvements in photovoltaic energy harvesting and new opto-electronic devices. In this work, we dielectrophoretically assemble single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) of homogeneous composition into aligned filaments that can exchange excitation energy, concentrating it to the center of core-shell structures with radial gradients in the optical band gap. We find an unusually sharp, reversible decay in photoemission that occurs as such filaments are cycled from ambient to only 353 K, attributed to the strongly temperature dependent second order Auger process. Core-shell structures consisting of annular shells of mostly (6,5) SWNT (Eg = 1.20 eV ) and cores with bandgaps smaller than those of the shell (Eg = 1.02 eV (11,3) to 0.98 eV (8,7)) demonstrate the concentration concept: broad band absorption in the ultraviolet (UV) - near-infrared (nIR) wavelength regime provides singular photoemission at the (8,7) SWNT. This approach demonstrates the potential of specifically designed collections of nanotubes to manipulate and concentrate excitons in unique ways.