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Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopy Brief Introduction to nanotubes Independent electron model for optical spectra 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling with 1/R 1D interactions: excitons Short Range Interactions: exciton fine structure C.L. Kane & E.J. Mele Large radius theory of optical transitions in semiconducting nanotubes derived from low energy theory of graphene Phys. Rev. Lett. in press cond-mat/ 0403153
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Page 1: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Electron Interactions andNanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopy

• Brief Introduction to nanotubes• Independent electron model for optical spectra• 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling with 1/R• 1D interactions: excitons• Short Range Interactions: exciton fine structure

C.L. Kane & E.J. MeleLarge radius theory of optical transitions in semiconducting

nanotubes derived from low energy theory of graphenePhys. Rev. Lett. in presscond-mat/ 0403153

Page 2: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Carbon Nanotubes as Electronic MaterialsSource DrainGate

~ 1 µm

~ 1 nm

A Molecular Quantum Wire

Tans et al. (Nature 1998)

• Ballistic Conductor• Field Effect Transistor• Logic Gates

Page 3: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Carbon Nanotubes as Optical Materials

• Nanotubes in surfactant micellesBachillo et al. (2002).

• Photoluminescence from individual suspended nanotubes Lefebvre et al. (2003).

Photoluminescence Electroluminescence& Photoconductivity

• Infrared Emission, photoconductivity in individual nanotube field effect devices Freitag et al., (IBM) 2004

Page 4: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Carbon Nanotube : Wrapped Graphene

• Radius : R = |C|/2π• Chiral Angle : 0 < θ < 30ο

• Chiral Index : ν = n1-n2 mod 3= 0,1,-1

C = n1 a1 + n2 a2

Tubes characterized by [n1,n2] or

Page 5: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Metal• Finite Density of States

(DOS) at Fermi Energy

Semiconductor

Graphene

• Gap at Fermi Energy

Electronic Structure

• Zero Gap Semiconductor

• Zero DOS metal

Page 6: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Low Energy Theory of Graphene

“Effective Mass” Model: Massless Dirac Hamiltonian

v 0.53 e m n VF =

BrillouinZone

†veff FHi

σψ ψ⋅∇=

( ) v | |FE q q= ±F 0 0v 3 / 2 ; 2.5 eVaγ γ= =Tight Binding model:

Page 7: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Wrap it up…...• Flat Graphene:

A zero gap semiconductor

• Periodic boundary conditions on cylinder:

n1-n2 = 0 mod 3

n1-n2 = +/-1 mod 3

1D Metal

Semiconductor

Page 8: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Near-infrared Photoluminescence from Single-wall Carbon Nanotubes

Excitation (661 nm) Emission (> 850 nm)

O’Connel et al. (Science 02) Bachillo et al. (Science 02)

Page 9: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopy O’Connel et al. (Science 02) Bachillo et al. (Science 02)

v1v2

c2c1

Each peak in the correlation plot corresponds to a particularspecies [n1,n2] of semiconducting nanotube

GOAL:Understand observed transition energies in terms of low energyproperties of an ideal 2 dimensional graphene sheet.

Page 10: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Free Electron Theory of Nanotube Bandgaps

• Zeroth order:0 2 v

3F

nnER

= (n = 1, 2, 4, 5,…)

Systematic expansion for large radius, R

Page 11: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Free Electron Theory of Nanotube Bandgaps

• Zeroth order:0 2 v

3F

nnER

= (n = 1, 2, 4, 5,…)

Systematic expansion for large radius, R

2. .

2

sin3( 1)T W nn

nER

θν∆ ∝ −

2

sin 3( 1)C nnE

Rθν∆ ∝ −

Curvature and Trigonal Warping:

• Vary as 1/R2

• Alternate with band index n• Alternate with chiral index ν• Vanish for armchair tubes, θ=0

Different dependence on n

The large R limit is most accurate for nearly armchair tubes: θ ~ 0En

0 describes tight binding gaps accurately for R > .5 nm

• Trigonal Warping Correction

• Curvature Correction

Page 12: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Experimental “Ratio Plot” Theory (includes sin3θ/R2

deviations)

• By comparing the experimental and theoretical ratio plots the[n1,n2] values (and hence R and θ) for each peak can be identified.

• Corroborated by Raman spectroscopy of the radial breathingmode.

Nanotube Assignments from Pattern of sin 3θ/R2 Deviations

Page 13: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

The Ratio Problem

• Free electron theory predicts

• Consequence of linear dispersion of graphene22 11/ 2 for RE E → → ∞

22

11

EE

1.75

2

Increasing diameter

Page 14: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Scaling of Optical Transition Energies

• ν sin 3θ / R2 deviations are clear

Free electrons for θ=0

(Kane,Mele ’04)

• Separatrix between ν=+1 and ν=−1describes nearly armchairtubes with θ=0, where sin 3θ/R2

deviations vanish.

0F( ) 2 v / 3nnE R n R=

Page 15: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Scaling of Optical Transition Energies

• ν sin 3θ / R2 deviations are clear

Free electrons for θ=0

(Kane,Mele ’04)

• Separatrix between ν=+1 and ν=−1describes nearly armchairtubes with θ=0, where sin 3θ/R2

deviations vanish.

Nearly armchair[p+1,p] tubes

0F( ) 2 v / 3nnE R n R=

Page 16: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Scaling of Optical Transition Energies

Free electrons for θ=0

(Kane,Mele ’04)

Nearly armchair[p+1,p] tubes

Ratio Problem:

Blue Shift Problem:

0F( ) 2 v / 3nnE R n R=

22 11/ 2E E <

Nonlinear scaling Enn(R)=E(qn=n/3R) accounts for both effects.

Worse for large R

0( ) ( )nn nnE R E R>

Page 17: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

• Intermediate Range Interaction : (a < r < 2πR)

Electron Interactions in large radius tubes

• Long Range Interaction : (r > 2πR)

One Dimensional in characterStrongly bound excitons

• Short Range Interaction : (r~a)

For 2πR>>a electron interactions can be classified intothree regimes, which lead to distinct physical effects.

Two Dimensional in character

Nonlinear Scaling with n/R

Atomic in character

Exciton “Fine Structure”

Page 18: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Long Range Interaction : (r > 2πR)

• Renormalize Single Particle Gap

Increase observed energy gap

• Leads to exciton bindingDecrease observed energy gap

• Single Particle and Particle hole gaps both scale linearly with 1/R :

• Gap renormalization and exciton binding largely cancel each other.

2

( )| |eV z

zε=

2F F( ) ~ ( v / ) ( / v )E R R f e ε

0F

2F

~ v /

/ 2 * ~ vGE R

m R

Page 19: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Cancellation of gap renormalization and exciton binding:

• Single Particle excitation:Self energy ~ e2/εRDepends on dielectric environment

• Particle-hole excitation:Bound exciton is unaffected by the long range part of the interaction.

The cancellation is exact for an infinite range interaction

• Coulomb Blockade Model :Bare gap: 2∆ Interaction energy: U N2/2

• Single particle gap 2∆ + U • Particle-hole gap 2∆

Page 20: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

• Leads to nonlinear q log qdispersion of graphene.

• Responsible for nonlinearscaling of E11(n/R).

Intermediate Range Interaction: (a < r < 2πR)

Short Range Interaction: (r ~ a)• Leads to “fine structure” in the

exciton spectrum: S=0,1, etc.

• Splittings ~ e2 a / R2

Page 21: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Interactions in 2D Graphene Gonzalez, Guinea, Vozmediano, PRB 99

• Renormalized Quasiparticle Dispersion:

1 log4

( ) vFE q gq

q⎛ ⎞Λ+⎜ ⎟⎝

=⎠

Singularity due to long range Coulomb interaction V(q) = 2πe2/q.

2F

2 † 2 2 ( ) ( 'v )'2 | ' |n r n rd r d rd rH e

i r rσψ ψ⋅∇

−= +∫ ∫

2F/ vg e=

Page 22: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Interactions in 2D Graphene Gonzalez, Guinea, Vozmediano, PRB 99

• Renormalized Quasiparticle Dispersion:

1 log4

( ) vFE q gq

q⎛ ⎞Λ+⎜ ⎟⎝

=⎠

• “Dielectric Screening” in 2 Dimensionsgscreened = g/ε Πstatic(q) = q/4vF εstatic = 1+gπ/2

Singularity due to long range Coulomb interaction V(q) = 2πe2/q.

2F

2 † 2 2 ( ) ( 'v )'2 | ' |n r n rd r d rd rH e

i r rσψ ψ⋅∇

−= +∫ ∫

2F/ vg e=

Page 23: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Interactions in 2D Graphene Gonzalez, Guinea, Vozmediano, PRB 99

• Renormalized Quasiparticle Dispersion:

1 log4

( ) vFE q gq

q⎛ ⎞Λ+⎜ ⎟⎝

=⎠

• “Dielectric Screening” in 2 Dimensionsgscreened = g/ε Πstatic(q) = q/4vF εstatic = 1+gπ/2

• Scaling Theory

21ln 4dg g

d= −

Λ Marginally Irrelevant

( ) ; v =v ( ) F Fg g= Λ Λ

• q ln q correction is exact for q 0

Singularity due to long range Coulomb interaction V(q) = 2πe2/q.

2F

2 † 2 2 ( ) ( 'v )'2 | ' |n r n rd r d rd rH e

i r rσψ ψ⋅∇

−= +∫ ∫

2F/ vg e=

Marginal Fermi Liquid

Page 24: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Compare 2D Theory with Experiment

( / 3 )

( ) 2 v 1 log4

nn n

F

E E q n R

gE q qq

= =

⎛ ⎞Λ= +⎜ ⎟⎝ ⎠

2

v .47 eV nm

1.2 2.5v

F

F

eg εε

=

= = ⇒ ∼

Free electron Theory2D Interacting Theory

Page 25: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Compare 2D Theory with Experiment

( / 3 )

( ) 2 v 1 log4

nn n

F

E E q n R

gE q qq

= =

⎛ ⎞Λ= +⎜ ⎟⎝ ⎠

2

v .47 eV nm

1.2 2.5v

F

F

eg εε

=

= = ⇒ ∼

Free electron Theory2D Interacting Theory

Page 26: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Compare 2D Theory with Experiment

( / 3 )

( ) 2 v 1 log4

nn n

F

E E q n R

gE q qq

= =

⎛ ⎞Λ= +⎜ ⎟⎝ ⎠

2

v .47 eV nm

1.2 2.5v

F

F

eg εε

=

= = ⇒ ∼

Free electron Theory2D Interacting Theory

The optical spectra reflects the finite size scaling of the 2D Marginal Fermi Liquid

Nearly armchair[p+1,p] tubes

Page 27: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Exciton effects: Compute particle-hole binding due to statically screened interaction (similar to Ando ‘97).

• Lowest exciton dominates oscillator strength for each subband.• Lineshape for absorption is not that of van Hove singularity.• Large bandgap renormalization mostly cancelled by exciton binding.

E/E110

Related Work:

Spaturu et al (Berkeley)PRL 03

Perebeinos et al (IBM)PRL 04

Page 28: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Scaling behavior: En(R) = E( qn = n/3R )?

2F

F

v 1 3( ) log3 4 v

nnexciton n

n e RE R cR nε⎡ ⎤Λ= +⎢ ⎥⎣ ⎦

cn ~ independent of n

Log(3RΛ/n)

F

3 ( )v nn

R E Rn

Page 29: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

KK’

Exciton Fine StructureDegenerate exciton states:

e :h :

or ; o

r or ;

'' or

k sk K K s

K K ⎫= = ⎪⎬

=↑ ↓

↓=↑ ⎪⎭

16states

Degeneracy lifted by short range (q~1/a) interactions:K’K

KK’

V(q=K)

eh

K+GK

KK+G

V(q=G)

Effective 2D Contact Interaction:

2 † †( ) ( ) ( ) ( )C abcd a b c dH d rU r r r rαβγδα β γ δψ ψ ψ ψ= ∫

2~U e a2

~4C

e aHRπ ξ ξ ~ exciton size ~ 2πR

Page 30: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

Exciton Eigenstates:

Classify by momentum, spin, parity under C2 rotation

; 0 ; q K S= ± =

0 ; 0 ; odd Optically Allowedq S= =

0 ; 0 ; evenq S= =

0 ; 1 ; oddq S= =

; 1 ;q K S= ± =

0 ; 1 ; evenq S= =

~30 meV(R~.5nm)

“Dark States”

See also Zhao, Mazumdar PRL 04

Page 31: Electron Interactions and Nanotube Fluorescence Spectroscopykane/html-physics/seminars/optics.pdf• Independent electron model for optical spectra • 2D interactions: nonlinear scaling

ConclusionFluorescence spectroscopy data for nearly armchair tubesis well described by a systematic large radius theory.

• 2D interactions:

- q log q renormalization of graphene dispersion.- Non linear scaling with 1/R.- Explains ratio problem and blue shift problem.

• 1D interactions

- Lead to large gap enhancement AND large exciton binding- Largely cancels in optical experiments revealing 2D effects.

• Short Range interactions-Lead to fine structure in exciton levels-Dark Ground State

Experiments: measure single particle energy gap

- Tunneling (complicated by screening)- Photoconductivity- Activated transport


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