2006 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2006;
Baltimore, MD
Session P18: Focus Session: Carbon Nanotubes: Opto-Electronics
11:15 AM–2:03 PM,
Wednesday, March 15, 2006
Baltimore Convention Center
Room: 315
Sponsoring
Unit:
DMP
Chair: Vasili Perebeinos, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.MAR.P18.1
Abstract: P18.00001 : Electrically-Induced Infrared Emission from Carbon Nanotube Devices
11:15 AM–11:51 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Jia Chen
(IBM T. J. Watson )
The optical properties of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are currently
the focus of
intense study. CNTs are direct band gap materials and their
optical spectra
have long been attributed to transitions between free particle
bands. We
show that studies of electrically-excited infrared (IR) emission
from single
nanotube molecules provide new insights into the electron-hole
interactions
in quasi-1D systems. We demonstrate strongly-enhanced
electroluminescence
from a partially suspended CNTFET operated under unipolar transport
conditions [1]. In our devices, carriers are generated locally,
when a
single type of carrier is accelerated under high local electric
fields at
intra-molecular junctions to energies sufficient to create strongly
correlated e-h pairs (excitons). This excitation mechanism
contrasts with
emission from radiative recombination of carriers (electrons and
holes)
injected from the opposite ends (source and drain) of a CNTFET
operated
under ambipolar transport conditions. The new excitation
mechanism is about
1000 times more efficient than recombination of independently
injected
electrons and holes, and it results from weak electron-phonon
scattering and
strong electron-hole binding caused by one-dimensional
confinement. We show
that the light emission intensity increases exponentially with
the drive
current in partially suspended CNTFETs, while in 3D materials
light emission
is usually proportional to the product of the electron and the hole
currents. The strong Coulomb interaction between electrons and
holes in a 1D
CNT creates bound excitons whose binding energies are more than
an order of
magnitude larger that those in 3D materials, preventing them from
dissociating under electrical fields thus contributing little to
drive
current compared with that in 3D. Finally, the much higher
exciton density
achieved in our devices than that in typical photoluminescence
experiments
allows us to detect emission from higher excitation states in CNTs.
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[1] J. Chen, V. Perebeinos, M. Freitag, J. Tsang, Q. Fu, J. Liu,
Ph. Avouris, Science 310, 1171 (2005).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.MAR.P18.1