Excitonic energy transfer in polymer wrapped carbon nanotubes in gradually grown nanoassemblies

Phys Chem Chem Phys. 2014 Jun 14;16(22):10914-22. doi: 10.1039/c4cp00776j.

Abstract

We investigate the exciton energy transfer (ET) in nanoassemblies (nanotube based aggregates) formed by polymer wrapped single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) using photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy and simulation. The distinctive feature of this study is the gradual growth of such nanostructures in aqueous medium induced by increasing the concentration of porphyrin molecules stitching nanotube-polymer complexes in densely packed assemblies. Experimental dependencies of PL intensity on the porphyrin concentration for different types of semiconducting SWNTs demonstrate step-like behavior controlled by the amount of bound nanotubes and are in good agreement with the simulating model. The simulation algorithm determines the criterion of the aggregate formation depending on the number of porphyrin molecules per tube and the cascade exciton energy transfer between neighboring semiconducting nanotubes of different chiralities. Aggregates of small sizes (up to six-eight individual tubes) contain mostly semiconducting species, while aggregates of a larger size (up to several tens of tubes) incorporate metallic SWNTs, inducing strong PL quenching. From the fitting procedure, an ET rate of 0.6 × 10(10) s(-1) has been determined which is consistent with the center to center distance (∼2.3 nm) between adjacent tubes separated by polymer and porphyrin molecules. The threshold of the dimer formation corresponds to one porphyrin molecule per ∼20 nm of tube lengths that was supported by molecular dynamics simulation. These findings provide insight into the ET mechanism in SWNT nanoassemblies of variable sizes, which can be gradually controlled by the external factor (the concentration of porphyrin molecules).