Superlocalization of Excitons in Carbon Nanotubes
at Cryogenic Temperature
Posted on 2019-09-10 - 20:05
At cryogenic temperature
and at the single emitter level, the optical
properties of single-wall carbon nanotubes depart drastically from
that of a one-dimensional (1D) object. In fact, the (usually unintentional)
localization of excitons in local potential wells leads to nearly
0D behaviors such as photon antibunching, spectral diffusion, inhomogeneous
broadening, etc. Here, we present a hyperspectral imaging of this
spontaneous exciton localization effect at the single nanotube level
using a super-resolved optical microscopy approach. We report on the
statistical distribution of the trap localization, depth, and width.
We use a quasi-resonant photoluminescence excitation approach to probe
the confined quantum states. Numerical simulations of the quantum
states and exciton diffusion show that the excitonic states are deeply
modified by the interface disorder inducing a remarkable discretization
of the excitonic absorption spectrum and a quenching of the free 1D
exciton absorption.
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Raynaud, C.; Claude, T.; Borel, A.; Amara, M. R.; Graf, A.; Zaumseil, J.; et al. (2019). Superlocalization of Excitons in Carbon Nanotubes
at Cryogenic Temperature. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b02816Â