Advances in Quantifying and Improving Alignment of Carbon/Boron Nitride Nanotube Composite Films Towards Applications in Quantum Photonics
ORAL
Abstract
Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) are poised to support next-generation optical and electronic devices and serve as vehicles for fundamental condensed-matter investigations. While prior studies have harnessed the strong light-matter coupling present in dense, globally aligned SWCNT films assembled by vacuum filtration, individualization of luminescent SWCNTs promises efficient emission characteristics for, e.g., single photon sources in quantum-computing architectures. We demonstrate the use of boron nitride nanotubes (BNNTs) as a robust, optically inert, and alignable host material that can controllably template SWCNT positioning and enhance their luminescent yield. Along the way, we explore the effects of BNNT purification, length sorting, and solution filtration parameters on the structural ordering of resulting thin films, establishing hydrodynamic regimes that allow global alignment. Directly probing the structural alignment of BNNTs is challenging; however, polarized extinction and resonance Raman mapping of tracer SWCNTs within an aligned BNNT matrix enables resolution of mesoscopic structural detail and assessment of global alignment. Composite films containing aligned, chirality-pure semiconducting SWCNTs exhibit order-of-magnitude increases in specific fluorescence with decreasing SWCNT loadings, indicating progress and value for realizing natively embedded, individualized single-photon emitters and other functional thin-film architectures.
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Publication: Manuscript to be submitted: "Aligned Boron Nitride Nanotube Thin Films and their Co-Composites with Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes through Slow Vacuum Filtration"
Presenters
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Pavel Shapturenka
National Institute of Standards and Technology, University of Pennsylvania
Authors
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Pavel Shapturenka
National Institute of Standards and Technology, University of Pennsylvania
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Tehseen Adel
Department of Physical Sciences, University of Findlay, University of Findlay
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Frank M Abel
US Naval Academy
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Angela R. Hight Walker
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
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Jeffrey A Fagan
National Institute of Standards and Technology