23 research outputs found
Role of Dopants in Long-Range Charge Carrier Transport for pāType and nāType Graphene Transparent Conducting Thin Films
Monolayer to few-layer graphene thin films have several attractive properties such as high transparency, exceptional electronic transport, mechanical durability, and environmental stability, which are required in transparent conducting electrodes (TCs). The successful incorporation of graphene TCs into demanding applications such as thin film photovoltaics requires a detailed understanding of the factors controlling long-range charge transport. In this study, we use spectroscopic and electrical transport measurements to provide a self-consistent understanding of the macroscopic (centimeter, many-grain scale) transport properties of chemically doped p-type and n-type graphene TCs. We demonstrate the first large-area n-type graphene TCs through the use of hydrazine or polyethyleneimine as dopants. The n-type graphene TCs utilizing PEI, either as the sole dopant or as an overcoat, have good stability in air compared to TCs only doped with hydrazine. We demonstrate a shift in Fermi energy of well over 1 V between the n- and p-type graphene TCs and a sheet resistance of ā¼50 Ī©/sq at 89% visible transmittance. The carrier density is increased by 2 orders of magnitude in heavily doped graphene TCs, while the mobility is reduced by a factor of ā¼7 due to charged impurity scattering. Temperature-dependent measurements demonstrate that the molecular dopants also help to suppress processes associated with carrier localization that may limit the potential of intrinsic graphene TCs. These results suggest that properly doped graphene TCs may be well-suited as anodes or cathodes for a variety of opto-electronic applications
Photoluminescence Side Band Spectroscopy of Individual Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes
Photoluminescence
spectra of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) have been recorded
and analyzed for selected individual nanotubes and structurally sorted
bulk samples to clarify the nature of secondary emission features.
Room temperature spectra show, in addition to the main peak arising
from the E<sub>11</sub> bright exciton, three features at lower frequency,
which are identified here (in descending order of energy difference
from E<sub>11</sub> emission) as G<sub>1</sub>, X<sub>1</sub>, and
Y<sub>1</sub>. The weakest (G<sub>1</sub>) is interpreted as a vibrational
satellite of E<sub>11</sub> involving excitation of the ā¼1600
cm<sup>ā1</sup> G mode. The X<sub>1</sub> feature, although
more intense than G<sub>1</sub>, has a peak amplitude only ā¼3%
of E<sub>11</sub>. X<sub>1</sub> emission was found to be polarized
parallel to E<sub>11</sub> and to be separated from that peak by 1068
cm<sup>ā1</sup> in SWCNTs with natural isotopic abundance.
The separation remained unchanged for several (<i>n</i>,<i>m</i>) species, different nanotube environments, and various
levels of induced axial strain. In <sup>13</sup>C SWCNTs, the spectral
separation decreased to 1023 cm<sup>ā1</sup>. The measured
isotopic shift points to a phonon-assisted transition that excites
the D vibration. This supports prior interpretations of the X<sub>1</sub> band as emission from the dark K-momentum exciton, whose
energy we find to be ā¼230 cm<sup>ā1</sup> above E<sub>11</sub>. The remaining sideband, Y<sub>1</sub>, is red-shifted ā¼300
cm<sup>ā1</sup> from E<sub>11</sub> and varies in relative
intensity among and within individual SWCNTs. We assign it as defect-induced
emission, either from an extrinsic state or from a brightened triplet
state. In contrast to single-nanotube spectra, bulk samples show asymmetric
zero-phonon E<sub>11</sub> peaks, with widths inversely related to
SWCNT diameter. An empirical expression for this dependence is presented
to aid the simulation of overlapped emission spectra during quantitative
fluorimetric analysis of bulk SWCNT samples
Ultrafast Spectroscopic Signature of Charge Transfer between Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes and C<sub>60</sub>
The time scales for interfacial charge separation and recombination play crucial roles in determining efficiencies of excitonic photovoltaics. Near-infrared photons are harvested efficiently by semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) paired with appropriate electron acceptors, such as fullerenes (<i>e</i>.<i>g</i>., C<sub>60</sub>). However, little is known about crucial photochemical events that occur on femtosecond to nanosecond time scales at such heterojunctions. Here, we present transient absorbance measurements that utilize a distinct spectroscopic signature of charges within SWCNTs, the absorbance of a trion quasiparticle, to measure both the ultrafast photoinduced electron transfer time (Ļ<sub>pet</sub>) and yield (Ļ<sub>pet</sub>) in photoexcited SWCNTāC<sub>60</sub> bilayer films. The rise time of the trion-induced absorbance enables the determination of the photoinduced electron transfer (PET) time of Ļ<sub>pet</sub> ā¤ 120 fs, while an experimentally determined trion absorbance cross section reveals the yield of charge transfer (Ļ<sub>pet</sub> ā 38 Ā± 3%). The extremely fast electron transfer times observed here are on par with some of the best donor:acceptor pairs in excitonic photovoltaics and underscore the potential for efficient energy harvesting in SWCNT-based devices
Confirmation of K-Momentum Dark Exciton Vibronic Sidebands Using <sup>13</sup>C-labeled, Highly Enriched (6,5) Single-walled Carbon Nanotubes
A detailed knowledge of the manifold of both bright and
dark excitons
in single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) is critical to understanding
radiative and nonradiative recombination processes. Excitonāphonon
coupling opens up additional absorption and emission channels, some
of which may ābrightenā the sidebands of optically forbidden
(dark) excitonic transitions in optical spectra. In this report, we
compare <sup>12</sup>C and <sup>13</sup>C-labeled SWCNTs that are
highly enriched in the (6,5) species to identify both absorptive and
emissive vibronic transitions. We find two vibronic sidebands near
the bright <sup>1</sup>E<sub>11</sub> singlet exciton, one absorptive
sideband ā¼200 meV above, and one emissive sideband ā¼140
meV below, the bright singlet exciton. Both sidebands demonstrate
a ā¼50 cm<sup>ā1</sup> isotope-induced shift, which is
commensurate with excitonāphonon coupling involving phonons
of A<sub>1</sub><sup>ā²</sup> symmetry (D band, Ļ ā¼
1330 cm<sup>ā1</sup>). Independent analysis of each sideband
indicates that both sidebands arise from the same dark exciton level,
which lies at an energy approximately 25 meV above the bright singlet
exciton. Our observations support the recent prediction of, and mounting
experimental evidence for, the dark K-momentum singlet exciton lying
ā¼25 meV (for the (6,5) SWCNT) above the bright Ī-momentum
singlet. This study represents the first use of <sup>13</sup>C-labeled
SWCNTs highly enriched in a single nanotube species to unequivocally
confirm these sidebands as vibronic sidebands of the dark K-momentum
singlet exciton
Strong Acoustic Phonon Localization in Copolymer-Wrapped Carbon Nanotubes
Understanding and controlling excitonāphonon interactions in carbon nanotubes has important implications for producing efficient nanophotonic devices. Here we show that laser vaporization-grown carbon nanotubes display ultranarrow luminescence line widths (120 Ī¼eV) and well-resolved acoustic phonon sidebands at low temperatures when dispersed with a polyfluorene copolymer. Remarkably, we do not observe a correlation of the zero-phonon line width with <sup>13</sup>C atomic concentration, as would be expected for pure dephasing of excitons with acoustic phonons. We demonstrate that the ultranarrow and phonon sideband-resolved emission spectra can be fully described by a model assuming extrinsic acoustic phonon localization at the nanoscale, which holds down to 6-fold narrower spectral line width compared to previous work. Interestingly, both exciton and acoustic phonon wave functions are strongly spatially localized within 5 nm, possibly mediated by the copolymer backbone, opening future opportunities to engineer dephasing and optical bandwidth for applications in quantum photonics and cavity optomechanics
Charge Transfer Dynamics between Carbon Nanotubes and Hybrid Organic Metal Halide Perovskite Films
In
spite of the rapid rise of metal organic halide perovskites
for next-generation solar cells, little quantitative information on
the electronic structure of interfaces of these materials is available.
The present study characterizes the electronic structure of interfaces
between semiconducting single walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT) contacts
and a prototypical methylammonium lead iodide (MAPbI<sub>3</sub>)
absorber layer. Using photoemission spectroscopy we provide quantitative
values for the energy levels at the interface and observe the formation
of an interfacial dipole between SWCNTs and perovskite. This process
can be ascribed to electron donation from the MAPbI<sub>3</sub> to
the adjacent SWCNT making the nanotube film <i>n</i>-type
at the interface and inducing band bending throughout the SWCNT layer.
We then use transient absorbance spectroscopy to correlate this electronic
alignment with rapid and efficient photoexcited charge transfer. The
results indicate that SWCNT transport and contact layers facilitate
rapid charge extraction and suggest avenues for enhancing device performance
Charge Separation in P3HT:SWCNT Blends Studied by EPR: Spin Signature of the Photoinduced Charged State in SWCNT
Single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs)
could be employed in organic
photovoltaic (OPV) devices as a replacement or additive for currently
used fullerene derivatives, but significant research remains to explain
fundamental aspects of charge generation. Electron paramagnetic resonance
(EPR) spectroscopy, which is sensitive only to unpaired electrons,
was applied to explore charge separation in P3HT:SWCNT blends. The
EPR signal of the P3HT positive polaron increases as the concentration
of SWCNT acceptors in a photoexcited P3HT:SWCNT blend is increased,
demonstrating long-lived charge separation induced by electron transfer
from P3HT to SWCNTs. An EPR signal from reduced SWCNTs was not identified
in blends due to the free and fast-relaxing nature of unpaired SWCNT
electrons as well as spectral overlap of this EPR signal with the
signal from positive P3HT polarons. However, a weak EPR signal was
observed in chemically reduced SWNTs, and the <i>g</i> values
of this signal are close to those of C<sub>70</sub>-PCBM anion radical.
The anisotropic line shape indicates that these unpaired electrons
are not free but instead localized
Photoluminescence Imaging of Polyfluorene Surface Structures on Semiconducting Carbon Nanotubes: Implications for Thin Film Exciton Transport
Single-walled
carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) have potential to act as
light-harvesting elements in thin film photovoltaic devices, but performance
is in part limited by the efficiency of exciton diffusion processes
within the films. Factors contributing to exciton transport can include
film morphology encompassing nanotube orientation, connectivity, and
interaction geometry. Such factors are often defined by nanotube surface
structures that are not yet well understood. Here, we present the
results of a combined pumpāprobe and photoluminescence imaging
study of polyfluorene (PFO)-wrapped (6,5) and (7,5) SWCNTs that provide
additional insight into the role played by polymer structures in defining
exciton transport. Pumpāprobe measurements suggest exciton
transport occurs over larger length scales in films composed of PFO-wrapped
(7,5) SWCNTs, compared to those prepared from PFO-bpy-wrapped (6,5)
SWCNTs. To explore the role the difference in polymer structure may
play as a possible origin of differing transport behaviors, we performed
a photoluminescence imaging study of individual polymer-wrapped (6,5)
and (7,5) SWCNTs. The PFO-bpy-wrapped (6,5) SWCNTs showed more uniform
intensity distributions along their lengths, in contrast to the PFO-wrapped
(7,5) SWCNTs, which showed irregular, discontinuous intensity distributions.
These differences likely originate from differences in surface coverage
and suggest the PFO wrapping on (7,5) nanotubes produces a more open
surface structure than is available with the PFO-bpy wrapping of (6,5)
nanotubes. The open structure likely leads to improved <i>intertube</i> coupling that enhances exciton transport within the (7,5) films,
consistent with the results of our pumpāprobe measurements
Free Carrier Generation and Recombination in Polymer-Wrapped Semiconducting Carbon Nanotube Films and Heterojunctions
Semiconducting
single-walled carbon nanotubes (s-SWCNTs) are promising
for solution-processed, thin film photovoltaics due to their strong
near-infrared absorptivity and excellent transport properties. We
report on the generation yield and recombination kinetics of free
charge carriers in photoexcited thin films of polymer-wrapped s-SWCNTs
with and without an overlying electron-accepting C<sub>60</sub> layer,
using time-resolved microwave photoconductivity (TRMC). Free carriers
are generated in neat s-SWCNT films, even without an obvious driving
force for exciton dissociation. However, most carriers recombine in
<10 ns. Adding C<sub>60</sub> increases the yield and extends the
lifetime of a significant fraction of free carriers to ā«100
ns via interfacial charge separation. Spectral dependencies indicate
that the driving force for interfacial electron transfer vanishes
for large-diameter SWCNTs, from which we approximate (9,7) s-SWCNT
energetics. We estimate a free carrier generation yield of ā¼6%
in neat s-SWCNT films and 9 GHz SWCNT hole mobility of >1.3 cm<sup>2</sup> V<sup>ā1</sup> s<sup>ā1</sup>. These studies
improve understanding of s-SWCNT photoresponses in solar cells and
photodetectors
Unraveling the <sup>13</sup>C NMR Chemical Shifts in Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes: Dependence on Diameter and Electronic Structure
The atomic specificity afforded by nuclear magnetic resonance
(NMR)
spectroscopy could enable detailed mechanistic information about single-walled
carbon nanotube (SWCNT) functionalization as well as the noncovalent
molecular interactions that dictate ground-state charge transfer and
separation by electronic structure and diameter. However, to date,
the polydispersity present in as-synthesized SWCNT populations has
obscured the dependence of the SWCNT <sup>13</sup>C chemical shift
on intrinsic parameters such as diameter and electronic structure,
meaning that no information is gleaned for specific SWCNTs with unique
chiral indices. In this article, we utilize a combination of <sup>13</sup>C labeling and density gradient ultracentrifugation (DGU)
to produce an array of <sup>13</sup>C-labeled SWCNT populations with
varying diameter, electronic structure, and chiral angle. We find
that the SWCNT isotropic <sup>13</sup>C chemical shift decreases systematically
with increasing diameter for semiconducting SWCNTs, in agreement with
recent theoretical predictions that have heretofore gone unaddressed.
Furthermore, we find that the <sup>13</sup>C chemical shifts for small
diameter metallic and semiconducting SWCNTs differ significantly,
and that the full-width of the isotropic peak for metallic SWCNTs
is much larger than that of semiconducting nanotubes, irrespective
of diameter