Interfacial photoinduced carrier dynamics tuned by polymerization of coronene molecules encapsulated in carbon nanotubes: bridging type-I and type-II heterojunctions†
Abstract
Carbon nanomaterials play important roles in modern scientific research. Integrating different carbon-based building blocks into nano-hybrid architectures not only takes full advantage of each component, but also brings in novel interfacial properties. Herein, we have employed density functional theory (DFT) calculations to investigate the effects of polymerization degree of coronene molecules encapsulated in single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) (19,0) on their interfacial properties. The present results reveal that the interfacial properties of the formed heterojunctions are remarkably regulated by the polymerization degree. For example, monomer- and dimer-encapsulated SWNTs are type-I heterojunctions in which interfacial excitation energy transfer is preferred, whereas interfacial charge carrier transfer is favorable in trimer- and polymer-encapsulated SWNTs because they are type-II heterojunctions. On the other hand, we have employed the time-domain nonadiabatic dynamics simulation approach to explore the interfacial carrier dynamics in type-II polymer-encapsulated SWNT heterojunctions. It is found that the electron and hole transfer processes are asymmetric and occur in opposite directions and at different rates. The former takes place from polymers to SWNTs in an ultrafast way (ca. 370 fs), whereas the latter occurs slowly from SWNTs to polymers (ca. 24 ps). A closer analysis uncovers the fact that the different carrier transfer rates mainly originate from the different densities of the acceptor states, energy differences and inter-state couplings between the donor and acceptor states. Finally, the present work demonstrates that the polymerization degree could act as a new regulating strategy to tune the interfacial properties of molecule-encapsulated SWNT heterojunctions.
- This article is part of the themed collections: Developments in Ultrafast Spectroscopy and 2021 PCCP HOT Articles