posted on 2016-10-25, 00:00authored byEtienne Gaufrès, Nathalie Y.-W. Tang, Alexandre Favron, Charlotte Allard, François Lapointe, Vincent Jourdain, Saïd Tahir, Colin-Nadeau Brosseau, Richard Leonelli, Richard Martel
Liquid-phase encapsulation
of α-sexithiophene (6T) molecules
inside individualized single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) is investigated
using Raman imaging and spectroscopy. By taking advantage of the strong
Raman response of this system, we probe the encapsulation isotherms
at 30 and 115 °C using a statistical ensemble of SWCNTs deposited
on a oxidized silicon substrate. Two distinct and sequential stages
of encapsulation are observed: Stage 1 is a one-dimensional (1D) aggregation
of 6T aligned head-to-tail inside the nanotube, and stage 2 proceeds
with the assembly of a second row, giving pairs of aligned 6Ts stacked
together side-by-side. The experimental data are fitted using both
Langmuir (type VI) and Ising models, in which the single-aggregate
(stage 1) forms spontaneously, whereas the pair-aggregate (stage 2)
is endothermic in toluene with formation enthalpy of ΔHpair = (260 ± 20) meV. Tunable Raman spectroscopy
for each stage reveals a bathochromic shift of the molecular resonance
of the pair-aggregate, which is consistent with strong intermolecular
coupling and suggestive of J-type aggregation. This quantitative Raman
approach is sensitive to roughly 10 molecules per nanotube and provides
direct evidence of molecular entry from the nanotube ends. These insights
into the encapsulation process guide the preparation of well-defined
1D molecular crystals having tailored optical properties.