Excitons in Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes in Different Local Environments: Effects of Strain and Disorder on Magnetic Brightening
ORAL
Abstract
Recent experiments on single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) have shown that in the presence of a high magnetic field the two lowest-energy spin-singlet exciton states become bright [1]. Furthermore, this ``magnetic brightening'', or increase in photoluminescence (PL) intensity as a function of magnetic flux through each SWNT, increases as the temperature decreases. Here, we report results of temperature-dependent magneto-PL from 2 to 200 K and up to 45 T on SWNTs of the same stock solution suspended in four different local environments. We compared both the brightening and temperature dependence of tubes stretch aligned and unaligned in poly-acrylic acid matrices. As expected, the tubes aligned at high magnetic field exhibited more brightening than those unaligned. We also investigated the behavior of SWNTs in two other matrices, iota-Carrageenan and gelatin. Along with the expected peak shifting and broadening from the effects of strain, we found that the temperature dependence changes with local environment. [1] S. Zaric \textit{et al}., PRL \textbf{96}, 016406 (2006); J. Shaver \textit{et al}., Nano Lett. \textbf{7}, 1851 (2007); I. B. Mortimer and R. J. Nicholas, PRL \textbf{98}, 027404 (2007).
*We would like to acknowedge support from the Welch Foundation, NSF No. DMR-0084173, the State of Florida, and DOE. T. A. Searles would like to thank the ONR/HBEC FEFF Fellowship Program.
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