Extracting Diameter and Chirality Dependences of Optical and Electronic Properties of Semiconducting Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes from First-Principles Calculations

ORAL

Abstract

First-principles methods based on the combination of density-functional theory (DFT) for ground-state properties, GW approximation for quasiparticle properties and Bethe-Salpeter equation (BSE) for optical properties represent the state-of-art for accurate and reliable calculations of optical and electronic properties of solids and molecules. For semiconducting carbon nanotubes (CNTs), they have been applied successfully to selected small-diameter tubes. In this work, we systematically calculate such properties for all zig-zag semiconducting single-wall carbon nanotubes with diameters ranging from (10,0) to (20,0) CNTs, allowing us to extract in a reliable way the diameter and chirality dependence of many properties, such as: (i) optical transition energies; (ii) quasiparticle band gaps; (iii) exciton binding energies; (iv) bright-dark exciton splittings; (v) excited exciton states properties; (vi) transverse-polarized exciton states properties; (vii) electron and hole effective masses (and therefore excitonic reduced masses). All properties are described with good accuracy by diameter- and chirality-dependent analytical formulas, with parameters extracted from the first-principles calculations.

Authors

  • Rodrigo Capaz

    Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

  • Jack Deslippe

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Steven G. Louie

    U. C. Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California at Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, University of California at Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Department of Physics, University of California at Berkeley and Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Department of Physics, University of California, Berkeley and Materials Science Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, UC Berkeley and Lab Berkeley National Lab