posted on 2012-06-06, 00:00authored byCarlos Romero-Nieto, Raúl García, M. Ángeles Herranz, Christian Ehli, Michaela Ruppert, Andreas Hirsch, Dirk M. Guldi, Nazario Martín
Electron donor–acceptor hybrids based on single
wall carbon
nanotubes (SWCNT) are one of the most promising functional structures
that are currently developed in the emerging areas of energy conversion
schemes and molecular electronics. As a suitable electron donor, π-extended
tetrathiafulvalene (exTTF) stands out owing to its recognition of
SWCNT through π–π stacking and electron donor–acceptor
interactions. Herein, we explore the shape and electronic complementarity
between different types of carbon nanotubes (CNT) and a tweezers-shaped
molecule endowed with two exTTFs in water. The efficient electronic
communication between semiconducting SWCNT/multiwall carbon nanotubes
(MWCNT), on one hand, and the water-soluble exTTF nanotweezers 8, on the other hand, has been demonstrated in the ground
and excited state by using steady-state as well as time-resolved spectroscopies,
which were further complemented by microscopy. Importantly, appreciable
electronic communication results in the electronic ground state having
a shift of electron density, that is, from exTTFs to CNT, and in the
electronic excited state having a full separation of electron density,
that is oxidized exTTF and reduced CNT. Lifetimes in the range of
several hundred picoseconds, which were observed for the corresponding
electron transfer products upon light irradiation, tend to be appreciably
longer in MWCNT/8 than in SWCNT/8.