Kevin S. Mistry
University of Colorado Boulder
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kevin S. Mistry.
ACS Nano | 2011
Kevin S. Mistry; Brian A. Larsen; Jeremy D. Bergeson; Teresa M. Barnes; Glenn Teeter; Chaiwat Engtrakul; Jeffrey L. Blackburn
In this report, we investigate the electrical and optical properties of thin conducting films of SWNTs after treatment with small molecule and polymeric amines. Among those tested, we find hydrazine to be the most effective n-type dopant. We use absorbance, Raman, X-ray photoelectron, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopies on thin conducting films and opaque buckypapers treated with hydrazine to study fundamental properties and spectroscopic signatures of n-type SWNTs and compare them to SWNTs treated with nitric acid, a well-characterized p-type dopant. We find that hydrazine physisorbs to the surface of semiconducting and metallic SWNTs and injects large electron concentrations, raising the Fermi level as much as 0.7 eV above that of intrinsic SWNTs. Hydrazine-treated transparent SWNT films display sheet resistances nearly as low as p-type nitric-acid-treated films at similar optical transmittances, demonstrating their potential for use in photovoltaic devices as low work function transparent electron-collecting electrodes.
Nature Chemistry | 2016
Rachelle Ihly; Kevin S. Mistry; Andrew J. Ferguson; Tyler T. Clikeman; Bryon W. Larson; Obadiah G. Reid; Olga V. Boltalina; Steven H. Strauss; Garry Rumbles; Jeffrey L. Blackburn
Understanding the kinetics and energetics of interfacial electron transfer in molecular systems is crucial for the development of a broad array of technologies, including photovoltaics, solar fuel systems and energy storage. The Marcus formulation for electron transfer relates the thermodynamic driving force and reorganization energy for charge transfer between a given donor/acceptor pair to the kinetics and yield of electron transfer. Here we investigated the influence of the thermodynamic driving force for photoinduced electron transfer (PET) between single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) and fullerene derivatives by employing time-resolved microwave conductivity as a sensitive probe of interfacial exciton dissociation. For the first time, we observed the Marcus inverted region (in which driving force exceeds reorganization energy) and quantified the reorganization energy for PET for a model SWCNT/acceptor system. The small reorganization energies (about 130 meV, most of which probably arises from the fullerene acceptors) are beneficial in minimizing energy loss in photoconversion schemes.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Chaiwat Engtrakul; Mark F. Davis; Kevin S. Mistry; Brian A. Larsen; Anne C. Dillon; Michael J. Heben; Jeffrey L. Blackburn
Solid-state (13)C NMR spectroscopy was used to investigate the chemical shift of nanotube carbons on m- and s-SWNTs (metallic and semiconducting single-walled nanotubes) for samples with widely varying s-SWNT content, including samples highly enriched with nearly 100% m- and s-SWNTs. High-resolution (13)C NMR was found to be a sensitive probe for m- and s-SWNTs in mixed SWNT samples with diameters of approximately 1.3 nm. The two highly enriched m- and s-SWNT samples clearly exhibited features for m- and s-SNWT (13)C nuclei (approximately 123 and 122 ppm, respectively) and were successfully fit with a single Gaussian, while five mixed samples required two Gaussians for a satisfactory fit.
ACS Nano | 2015
Ibrahim Sarpkaya; Ehsaneh D. Ahmadi; Gabriella D. Shepard; Kevin S. Mistry; Jeffrey L. Blackburn; Stefan Strauf
Understanding and controlling exciton-phonon interactions in carbon nanotubes has important implications for producing efficient nanophotonic devices. Here we show that laser vaporization-grown carbon nanotubes display ultranarrow luminescence line widths (120 μeV) and well-resolved acoustic phonon sidebands at low temperatures when dispersed with a polyfluorene copolymer. Remarkably, we do not observe a correlation of the zero-phonon line width with (13)C atomic concentration, as would be expected for pure dephasing of excitons with acoustic phonons. We demonstrate that the ultranarrow and phonon sideband-resolved emission spectra can be fully described by a model assuming extrinsic acoustic phonon localization at the nanoscale, which holds down to 6-fold narrower spectral line width compared to previous work. Interestingly, both exciton and acoustic phonon wave functions are strongly spatially localized within 5 nm, possibly mediated by the copolymer backbone, opening future opportunities to engineer dephasing and optical bandwidth for applications in quantum photonics and cavity optomechanics.
ACS Nano | 2013
Kevin S. Mistry; Brian A. Larsen; Jeffrey L. Blackburn
Nature Energy | 2016
Azure D. Avery; Ben H. Zhou; Jounghee Lee; Eui Sup Lee; Elisa M. Miller; Rachelle Ihly; Devin Wesenberg; Kevin S. Mistry; Sarah L. Guillot; Barry L. Zink; Yong-Hyun Kim; Jeffrey L. Blackburn; A. J. Ferguson
ACS Nano | 2014
Anne-Marie Dowgiallo; Kevin S. Mistry; Justin C. Johnson; Jeffrey L. Blackburn
Physical Review B | 2015
A. J. Ferguson; Anne-Marie Dowgiallo; Dominick J. Bindl; Kevin S. Mistry; Obadiah G. Reid; Nikos Kopidakis; Michael S. Arnold; Jeffrey L. Blackburn
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2016
Anne-Marie Dowgiallo; Kevin S. Mistry; Justin C. Johnson; Obadiah G. Reid; Jeffrey L. Blackburn
ACS Photonics | 2017
Kamran Shayan; Claire Rabut; Xiaoqing Kong; Xiangzhi Li; Yue Luo; Kevin S. Mistry; Jeffrey L. Blackburn; Stephanie S. Lee; Stefan Strauf