Abstract

Based on direct space DFT PBE0/6-31G* electronic structure calculations, the structure and properties of nanodiamond islands confined between two finite graphene fragments (NDI-c2G) was proposed and theoretically explored. DFT simulations revealed that fusion of planar aromatic molecules with two parent graphene fragments may form either cubic or hexagonal allotropes of NDI-c2Gs lattices accompanied with formation of local corrugated sp3 sites with substituted dangling bonds embedded into graphene sublattices. It was shown that at the DFT level of theory, low distortion energies of NDI-c2Gs lattices are comparable or smaller than the energy of van-der-Waals interactions, which allows the NDI-c2G lattices to be stabilized by a support and finally synthesized. The Nuclear Independent Chemical Shift calculations, shows that in the vicinity of NDI regions, graphene lattices are estimated to be either low-, or anti-aromatic. Furthermore, the formation of NDI-c2Gs leads to localization of HOMO and LUMO states at different sites of the NDI-c2Gs lattices. The NDI-c2G regions with confined frontier orbitals can be considered as arrays of quantum dots isolated from each other by NDI scattering centres of 3.82 Å dimension. The results demonstrates that NDI-c2G should be considered as strongly-correlated entangled hybrid quantum dots which may form extended quantum ensembles with great potential for advanced quantum applications.

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