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Asymmetric excitation profiles in the resonance Raman response of armchair carbon nanotubes

We performed tunable resonance Raman spectroscopy on samples highly enriched in the (5,5), (6,6), (7,7), and (8,8) armchair structures of metallic single-wall carbon nanotubes. We present Raman excitation profiles (REPs) for both the radial breathing mode and G-band phonons of these species. G-band...

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Published in:Physical review. B, Condensed matter and materials physics Condensed matter and materials physics, 2015-05, Vol.91 (20), Article 205446
Main Authors: Hároz, Erik H., Duque, Juan G., Barros, Eduardo B., Telg, Hagen, Simpson, Jeffrey R., Hight Walker, Angela R., Khripin, Constantine Y., Fagan, Jeffrey A., Tu, Xiaomin, Zheng, Ming, Kono, Junichiro, Doorn, Stephen K.
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Language:English
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Summary:We performed tunable resonance Raman spectroscopy on samples highly enriched in the (5,5), (6,6), (7,7), and (8,8) armchair structures of metallic single-wall carbon nanotubes. We present Raman excitation profiles (REPs) for both the radial breathing mode and G-band phonons of these species. G-band excitation profiles are shown to resolve the expected incoming and outgoing resonances of the scattering process. Notably, the profiles are highly asymmetric, with the higher-energy outgoing resonance weaker than the incoming resonance. These results are comparable to the asymmetric excitation profiles observed previously in semiconducting nanotubes, introduce a different electronic type, and broaden the structural range over which the asymmetry is found to exist. Modeling of the behavior with a third-order quantum model that accounts for the k dependence in energies and matrix elements, without including excitonic effects, is found to be insufficient for reproducing the observed asymmetry. We introduce an alternative fifth-order model in which the REP asymmetry arises from quantum interference introduced by phonon-mediated state mixing between the (ProQuest: Formulae and/or non-USASCII text omitted) and K-momentum excitons. Such state mixing effectively introduces a nuclear coordinate dependence in the transition dipole moment and thus may be viewed as a non-Condon effect from a molecular perspective. This result unifies a molecularlike picture of nanotube transitions (introduced by their excitonic nature) with a condensed matter approach for describing their behavior.
ISSN:1098-0121
1550-235X
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevB.91.205446