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- Unifying the low-temperature photoluminescence spectra of carbon nanotubes: the role of acoustic phonon confinement. doi link

Auteur(s): Vialla Fabien, Chassagneux Yannick, Ferreira Robson, Roquelet Cyrielle, Diederichs Carole, Cassabois G., Roussignol Philippe, Lauret Jean‐sébastien, Voisin Christophe

(Article) Publié: Physical Review Letters, vol. 113 p.057402 (2014)
Texte intégral en Openaccess : arxiv


Ref HAL: hal-01066160_v1
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.113.057402
WoS: 000339969600013
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
35 Citations
Résumé:

At low temperature the photoluminescence of single-wall carbon nanotubes show a large variety of spectral profiles ranging from ultra narrow lines in suspended nanotubes to broad and asymmetrical line-shapes that puzzle the current interpretation in terms of exciton-phonon coupling. Here, we present a complete set of photoluminescence profiles in matrix embedded nanotubes including unprecedented narrow emission lines. We demonstrate that the diversity of the low-temperature luminescence profiles in nanotubes originates in tiny modifications of their low-energy acoustic phonon modes. When low energy modes are locally suppressed, a sharp photoluminescence line as narrow as 0.7 meV is restored. Furthermore, multi-peak luminescence profiles with specific temperature dependence show the presence of confined phonon modes.