Abstract

We use the robust nearest-neighbor tight-binding approximation to study the same footing interband dipole transitions in narrow-bandgap carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and graphene nanoribbons (GNRs). It is demonstrated that curvature effects in metallic single-walled CNTs and edge effects in gapless GNRs not only open up bandgaps, which typically correspond to THz frequencies, but also result in a giant enhancement of the probability of optical transitions across these gaps. Moreover, the matrix element of the velocity operator for these transitions has a universal value (equal to the Fermi velocity in graphene) when the photon energy coincides with the bandgap energy. Upon increasing the excitation energy, the transition matrix element first rapidly decreases (for photon energies remaining in the THz range but exceeding two bandgap energies, it is reduced by three orders of magnitude), and thereafter it starts to increase proportionally to the photon frequency. A similar effect occurs in an armchair CNT with a bandgap opened and controlled by a magnetic field applied along the nanotube axis. There is a direct correspondence between armchair GNRs and single-walled zigzag CNTs. The described sharp photon-energy dependence of the transition matrix element, together with the van Hove singularity at the bandgap edge of the considered quasi-one-dimensional systems, makes them promising candidates for active elements of coherent THz radiation emitters. The effect of Pauli blocking of low-energy interband transitions caused by residual doping can be suppressed by creating a population inversion using high-frequency (optical) excitation.

Highlights

  • Creating reliable and portable coherent sources and sensitive detectors of terahertz (THz) radiation is one of the most formidable tasks of modern device physics.[1]

  • In the absence of curvature or edge effects, optical interband transitions near the crossing points of the valence and conduction bands of metallic carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and AGNRs are vanishing with reducing frequency

  • The frequency peaks in the spectral density of emission in narrow-gap CNTs can be tuned by the application of a magnetic field directed along the nanotube axis

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Creating reliable and portable coherent sources and sensitive detectors of terahertz (THz) radiation is one of the most formidable tasks of modern device physics.[1]. It is shown that the same curvature effect in quasi-metallic CNTs which opens the gap in the nanotube energy spectrum allows strong interband transitions in the THz range. These transitions are several orders of magnitude larger those previously considered in a model, which neglected curvature.[14]. The electron dispersion of ZGNR edge states is strongly modified by electron-electron interaction, whereas for AGNR the energy dispersion is influenced by the change of C-C bonds at the edge of the ribbon compared to bonds in the ribbon interior In both cases the outcome is a small band gap opening of the order of 50 meV. This, coupled with the van-Hove singularity in the joint density of states makes both quasi-metallic CNTs and AGNRs promising candidates as the building block of high-frequency devices

The band structure of narrow-gap CNTs with curvature
Optical selection rules
EXCITONIC EFFECTS
CONCLUSIONS
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