Abstract

Polarized photovoltage of a suspended aligned carbon nanotube (CNT) bundle under uniform optical irradiation is discovered without additional structural modification or bias voltage. Such a phenomenon is very surprising considering the metallic behavior of the overall bundle and zero temperature difference between ends. The photovoltage characteristic time is found similar to the thermal response time under step Joule heating and implies a relation to the thermal behavior of the CNT bundle. A similar thermoelectric voltage is also observed during step Joule heating. Localized laser heating and scanning along the axial direction of the bundle uncovers a linear spatial variation of the local Seebeck coefficient. The Seebeck coefficient linearly decreases from root to tip of the CNT bundle with a rate of a few - µV∙K−1·mm−1. Deep investigation in both the microscopic and macroscopic structures of the CNT bundle reveals that the local alignment of CNT assemblies rather than the minor defects in individual CNTs brings about this linear distribution of Seebeck coefficient in space. The finding presents a new way for direct photon-to-electric energy conversion via Seebeck coefficient grading in CNT structures.

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