1,148 research outputs found
Sorting and transmission electron microscopy analysis of single or double wall carbon nanotubes
On the basis of the recent progress on the sorting of carbon nanotubes’ structure with respect to their diameter or number of walls, we investigate by transmission electron microscopy the sorting efficiency, with a comparison with optical absorption spectroscopy measurements. We study density gradient ultracentrifugation sorted single walled or double walled carbon nanotubes, showing obviously the ability to separate carbon nanotubes of different diameters or/and number of walls. This microscopic approach affords accurate information about the sorted samples such as the real mean diameter, the relative concentration of double walled carbon nanotubes over single walled carbon nanotubes, standard deviation, and the real diameter distribution of carbon nanotubes, even beyond any possible accurate analysis from optical absorption spectroscopy. Therefore, we demonstrate that the diameter analysis of the sorted samples by TEM can indeed afford some information about the relevant optical properties of carbon nanotubes
Exciton energy transfer in nanotube bundles
Photoluminescence is commonly used to identify the electronic structure of
individual nanotubes. But, nanotubes naturally occur in bundles. Thus, we
investigate photoluminescence of nanotube bundles. We show that their complex
spectra are simply explained by exciton energy transfer between adjacent tubes,
whereby excitation of large gap tubes induces emission from smaller gap ones
via Forster interaction between excitons. The consequent relaxation rate is
faster than non-radiative recombination, leading to enhanced photoluminescence
of acceptor tubes. This fingerprints bundles with different compositions and
opens opportunities to optimize them for opto-electronics.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Dependence of exciton transition energy of single-walled carbon nanotubes on surrounding dielectric materials
We theoretically investigate the dependence of exciton transition energies on
dielectric constant of surrounding materials. We make a simple model for the
relation between dielectric constant of environment and a static dielectric
constant describing the effects of electrons in core states, bonds and
surrounding materials. Although the model is very simple, calculated results
well reproduce experimental transition energy dependence on dielectric constant
of various surrounding materials.Comment: 5pages, 4 figure
Toward Practical Non-Contact Optical Strain Sensing Using Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes
Progress is reported in an emerging non-contact strain sensing technology based on optical properties of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs). In this strain-sensing smart skin (“S4”) method, nanotubes are dilutely embedded in a thin polymer film applied to a substrate of interest. Subsequent strain in the substrate is transferred to the nanotubes, causing systematic spectral shifts in their characteristic short-wave infrared fluorescence peaks. A small diode laser excites a spot on the coated surface, and the resulting emission is captured and spectrally analyzed to deduce local strain. To advance performance of the method, we prepare S4 films with structurally selected SWCNTs. These give less congested emission spectra that can be analyzed precisely. However, quenching interactions with the polymer host reduce SWCNT emission intensity by an order of magnitude. The instrumentation that captures SWCNT fluorescence has been made lighter and smaller for hand-held use or mounting onto a positioning mechanism that makes efficient automated strain scans of laboratory test specimens. Statistical analysis of large S4 data sets exposes uncertainties in measurements at single positions plus spatial variations in deduced baseline strain levels. Future refinements to S4 film formulation and processing should provide improved strain sensing performance suitable for industrial application
Interaction between concentric Tubes in DWCNTs
A detailed investigation of the Raman response of the inner tube radial
breathing modes (RBMs) in double-wall carbon nanotubes is reported. It revealed
that the number of observed RBMs is two to three times larger than the number
of possible tubes in the studied frequency range. This unexpected increase in
Raman lines is attributed to a splitting of the inner tube response. It is
shown to originate from the possibility that one type of inner tube may form in
different types of outer tubes and the fact that the inner tube RBM frequency
depends on the diameter of the enclosing tube. Finally, a comparison of the
inner tube RBMs and the RBMs of tubes in bundles gave clear evidence that the
interaction in a bundle is stronger than the interaction between inner and
outer tubes.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Eur. Phys. J.
Ultrafast Optical Spectroscopy of Micelle-Suspended Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes
We present results of wavelength-dependent ultrafast pump-probe experiments
on micelle-suspended single-walled carbon nanotubes. The linear absorption and
photoluminescence spectra of the samples show a number of chirality-dependent
peaks, and consequently, the pump-probe results sensitively depend on the
wavelength. In the wavelength range corresponding to the second van Hove
singularities (VHSs), we observe sub-picosecond decays, as has been seen in
previous pump-probe studies. We ascribe these ultrafast decays to intraband
carrier relaxation. On the other hand, in the wavelength range corresponding to
the first VHSs, we observe two distinct regimes in ultrafast carrier
relaxation: fast (0.3-1.2 ps) and slow (5-20 ps). The slow component, which has
not been observed previously, is resonantly enhanced whenever the pump photon
energy resonates with an interband absorption peak, and we attribute it to
radiative carrier recombination. Finally, the slow component is dependent on
the pH of the solution, which suggests an important role played by H ions
surrounding the nanotubes.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, changed title, revised, to be published in
Applied Physics
Intersubband decay of 1-D exciton resonances in carbon nanotubes
We have studied intersubband decay of E22 excitons in semiconducting carbon
nanotubes experimentally and theoretically. Photoluminescence excitation line
widths of semiconducting nanotubes with chiral indicess (n, m) can be mapped
onto a connectivity grid with curves of constant (n-m) and (2n+m). Moreover,
the global behavior of E22 linewidths is best characterized by a strong
increase with energy irrespective of their (n-m) mod(3)= \pm 1 family
affiliation. Solution of the Bethe-Salpeter equations shows that the E22
linewidths are dominated by phonon assisted coupling to higher momentum states
of the E11 and E12 exciton bands. The calculations also suggest that the
branching ratio for decay into exciton bands vs free carrier bands,
respectively is about 10:1.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Carbon nanotube chirality enrichment through chirality-selective precipitation
The interaction with surfactants changes from one carbon nanotube species to
the other. We used this to replace non-ionic surfactants by ionic ones. By
fine-tuning the replacement conditions, we covered some specific nanotubes
with non-ionic surfactants and the others with ionic ones. Addition of salt
triggers precipitation of the species suspended by the ionic surfactant; this
effectively leads to chiral selective enrichment of a carbon nanotube
suspension. We hence produce an (8,4)-enriched suspension by replacing a
polyglycerol-based custom amphiphile with the commercial SDBS and salting with
NaCl
Method for separating single-wall carbon nanotubes and compositions thereof
The invention relates to a process for sorting and separating a mixture of (n, m) type single-wall carbon nanotubes according to (n, m) type. A mixture of (n, m) type single-wall carbon nanotubes is suspended such that the single-wall carbon nanotubes are individually dispersed. The nanotube suspension can be done in a surfactant-water solution and the surfactant surrounding the nanotubes keeps the nanotube isolated and from aggregating with other nanotubes. The nanotube suspension is acidified to protonate a fraction of the nanotubes. An electric field is applied and the protonated nanotubes migrate in the electric fields at different rates dependent on their (n, m) type. Fractions of nanotubes are collected at different fractionation times. The process of protonation, applying an electric field, and fractionation is repeated at increasingly higher pH to separated the (n, m) nanotube mixture into individual (n, m) nanotube fractions. The separation enables new electronic devices requiring selected (n, m) nanotube types
Enabling in vivo measurements of nanoparticle concentrations with three-dimensional optoacoustic tomography
In this report, we demonstrate the feasibility of using optoacoustic tomography (OAT) to evaluate biodistributions of nanoparticles in animal models. The redistribution of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) was visualized in living mice. Nanoparticle concentrations in harvested organs were measured spectroscopically using the intrinsic optical absorption and fluorescence of SWCNTs. Observed increases in optoacoustic signal brightness in tissues were compared with increases in optical absorption coefficients caused by SWCNT accumulation. The methodology presented in this report can further be extended to calibrate the sensitivity of an optoacoustic imaging system for a range of changes in optical absorption coefficient values at specific locations or organs in a mouse body to enable noninvasive measurements of nanoparticle concentrations in vivo. Additionally, qualitative information provided by OAT and quantitative information obtained ex vivo may provide valuable feedback for advancing methods of quantitative analysis with OAT
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