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Featured researches published by Mijin Kim.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Molecularly Tunable Fluorescent Quantum Defects

Hyejin Kwon; Al’ona Furmanchuk; Mijin Kim; Brendan Meany; Yong Guo; George C. Schatz; YuHuang Wang

We describe the chemical creation of molecularly tunable fluorescent quantum defects in semiconducting carbon nanotubes through covalently bonded surface functional groups that are themselves nonemitting. By variation of the surface functional groups, the same carbon nanotube crystal is chemically converted to create more than 30 distinct fluorescent nanostructures with unique near-infrared photoluminescence that is molecularly specific, systematically tunable, and significantly brighter than that of the parent semiconductor. This novel exciton-tailoring chemistry readily occurs in aqueous solution and creates functional defects on the sp2 carbon lattice with highly predictable C–C bonding from virtually any iodine-containing hydrocarbon precursor. Our new ability to control nanostructure excitons through a single surface functional group opens up exciting possibilities for postsynthesis chemical engineering of carbon nanomaterials and suggests that the rational design and creation of a large variety of molecularly tunable quantum emitters—for applications ranging from in vivo bioimaging and chemical sensing to room-temperature single-photon sources—can now be anticipated.


ACS Nano | 2016

Photoluminescence Dynamics of Aryl sp3 Defect States in Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes

Nicolai Hartmann; Kirill A. Velizhanin; Erik Haroz; Mijin Kim; Xuedan Ma; YuHuang Wang; Han Htoon; Stephen K. Doorn

Photoluminescent defect states introduced by sp(3) functionalization of semiconducting carbon nanotubes are rapidly emerging as important routes for boosting emission quantum yields and introducing new functionality. Knowledge of the relaxation dynamics of these states is required for understanding how functionalizing agents (molecular dopants) may be designed to access specific behaviors. We measure photoluminescence (PL) decay dynamics of sp(3) defect states introduced by aryl functionalization of the carbon nanotube surface. Results are given for five different nanotube chiralities, each doped with a range of aryl functionality. We find that the PL decays of these sp(3) defect states are biexponential, with both components relaxing on time scales of ∼100 ps. Exciton trapping at defects is found to increases PL lifetimes by a factor of 5-10, in comparison to those for the free exciton. A significant chirality dependence is observed in the decay times, ranging from 77 ps for (7,5) nanotubes to >600 ps for (5,4) structures. The strong correlation of time constants with emission energy indicates relaxation occurs via multiphonon decay processes, with close agreement to theoretical expectations. Variation of the aryl dopant further modulates decay times by 10-15%. The aryl defects also affect PL lifetimes of the free E11 exciton. Shortening of the E11 bright state lifetime as defect density increases provides further confirmation that defects act as exciton traps. A similar shortening of the E11 dark exciton lifetime is found as defect density increases, providing strong experimental evidence that dark excitons are also trapped at such defect sites.


ACS Nano | 2017

Superacid-Surfactant Exchange: Enabling Nondestructive Dispersion of Full-Length Carbon Nanotubes in Water

Peng Wang; Mijin Kim; Zhiwei Peng; Chuan-Fu Sun; Jasper Mok; Anna Lieberman; YuHuang Wang

Attaining aqueous solutions of individual, long single-walled carbon nanotubes is a critical first step for harnessing the extraordinary properties of these materials. However, the widely used ultrasonication-ultracentrifugation approach and its variants inadvertently cut the nanotubes into short pieces. The process is also time-consuming and difficult to scale. Here we present an unexpectedly simple solution to this decade-old challenge by directly neutralizing a nanotube-chlorosulfonic acid solution in the presence of sodium deoxycholate. This straightforward superacid-surfactant exchange eliminates the need for both ultrasonication and ultracentrifugation altogether, allowing aqueous solutions of individual nanotubes to be prepared within minutes and preserving the full length of the nanotubes. We found that the average length of the processed nanotubes is more than 350% longer than sonicated controls, with a significant fraction approaching ∼9 μm, a length that is limited by only the raw material. The nondestructive nature is manifested by an extremely low density of defects, bright and homogeneous photoluminescence in the near-infrared, and ultrahigh electrical conductivity in transparent thin films (130 Ω/sq at 83% transmittance), which well exceeds that of indium tin oxide. Furthermore, we demonstrate that our method is fully compatible with established techniques for sorting nanotubes by their electronic structures and can also be readily applied to graphene. This surprisingly simple method thus enables nondestructive aqueous solution processing of high-quality carbon nanomaterials at large-scale and low-cost with the potential for a wide range of fundamental studies and applications, including, for example, transparent conductors, near-infrared imaging, and high-performance electronics.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Chirality-Selective Functionalization of Semiconducting Carbon Nanotubes with a Reactivity-Switchable Molecule

Lyndsey R. Powell; Mijin Kim; YuHuang Wang

Chirality-selective functionalization of semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) has been a difficult synthetic goal for more than a decade. Here we describe an on-demand covalent chemistry to address this intriguing challenge. Our approach involves the synthesis and isolation of a chemically inert diazoether isomer that can be switched to its reactive form in situ by modulation of the thermodynamic barrier to isomerization with pH and visible light that resonates with the optical frequency of the nanotube. We found that it is possible to completely inhibit the reaction in the absence of light, as determined by the limit of sensitive defect photoluminescence (less than 0.01% of the carbon atoms are bonded to a functional group). This optically driven diazoether chemistry makes it possible to selectively functionalize a specific SWCNT chirality within a mixture. Even for two chiralities that are nearly identical in diameter and electronic structure, (6,5)- and (7,3)-SWCNTs, we are able to activate the diazoether compound to functionalize the less reactive (7,3)-SWCNTs, driving the chemical reaction to near exclusion of the (6,5)-SWCNTs. This work opens opportunities to chemically tailor SWCNTs at the single chirality level for nanotube sorting, on-chip passivation, and nanoscale lithography.


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

Photochemical Creation of Fluorescent Quantum Defects in Semiconducting Carbon Nanotube Hosts

Xiaojian Wu; Mijin Kim; Hyejin Kwon; YuHuang Wang

Quantum defects are an emerging class of synthetic single-photon emitters that hold vast potential for near-infrared imaging, chemical sensing, materials engineering, and quantum information processing. Herein, we show that it is possible to optically direct the synthetic creation of molecularly tunable fluorescent quantum defects in semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotube hosts through photochemical reactions. By exciting the host semiconductor with light that resonates with its electronic transition, we find that halide-containing aryl groups can covalently bond to the sp2 carbon lattice. The introduced quantum defects generate bright photoluminescence that allows tracking of the reaction progress in situ. We show that the reaction is independent of temperature but correlates strongly with the photon energy used to drive the reaction, suggesting a photochemical mechanism rather than photothermal effects. This type of photochemical reactions opens the possibility to control the synthesis of fluorescent quantum defects using light and may enable lithographic patterning of quantum emitters with electronic and molecular precision.


ACS Nano | 2018

Ultrashort Carbon Nanotubes That Fluoresce Brightly In The Near-Infrared

Noémie Danné; Mijin Kim; Antoine G. Godin; Hyejin Kwon; Zhenghong Gao; Xiaojian Wu; Nicolai F. Hartmann; Stephen K. Doorn; Brahim Lounis; YuHuang Wang; Laurent Cognet

The intrinsic near-infrared photoluminescence observed in long single-walled carbon nanotubes is known to be quenched in ultrashort nanotubes due to their tiny size as compared to the exciton diffusion length in these materials (>100 nm). Here, we show that intense photoluminescence can be created in ultrashort nanotubes (∼40 nm length) upon incorporation of exciton-trapping sp3 defect sites. Using super-resolution photoluminescence imaging at <25 nm resolution, we directly show the preferential localization of excitons at the nanotube ends, which separate by less than 40 nm and behave as independent emitters. This unexpected observation opens the possibility to synthesize fluorescent ultrashort nanotubes-a goal that has been long thought impossible-for bioimaging applications, where bright near-infrared photoluminescence and small size are highly desirable, and for quantum information science, where high quality and well-controlled near-infrared single photon emitters are needed.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016

Chemical Control and Spectral Fingerprints of Electronic Coupling in Carbon Nanostructures

Jacek Kłos; Mijin Kim; Millard H. Alexander; YuHuang Wang

The optical and electronic properties of atomically thin materials such as single-walled carbon nanotubes and graphene are sensitively influenced by substrates, the degree of aggregation, and the chemical environment. However, it has been experimentally challenging to determine the origin and quantify these effects. Here we use time-dependent density-functional-theory calculations to simulate these properties for well-defined molecular systems. We investigate a series of core-shell structures containing C60 enclosed in progressively larger carbon shells and their perhydrogenated or perfluorinated derivatives. Our calculations reveal strong electronic coupling effects that depend sensitively on the interparticle distance and on the surface chemistry. In many of these systems we predict considerable orbital mixing and charge transfer between the C60 core and the enclosing shell. We predict that chemical functionalization of the shell can modulate the electronic coupling to the point where the core and shell are completely decoupled into two electronically independent chemical systems. Additionally, we predict that the C60 core will oscillate within the confining shell, at a frequency directly related to the strength of the electronic coupling. This low-frequency motion should be experimentally detectable in the IR region.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2015

Optical Probing of Local pH and Temperature in Complex Fluids with Covalently Functionalized, Semiconducting Carbon Nanotubes

Hyejin Kwon; Mijin Kim; Brendan Meany; Yanmei Piao; Lyndsey R. Powell; YuHuang Wang


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016

Fluorescent Carbon Nanotube Defects Manifest Substantial Vibrational Reorganization

Mijin Kim; Lyudmyla Adamska; Nicolai F. Hartmann; Hyejin Kwon; Jin Liu; Kirill A. Velizhanin; Yanmei Piao; Lyndsey R. Powell; Brendan Meany; Stephen K. Doorn; Sergei Tretiak; YuHuang Wang


arxiv:physics.app-ph | 2018

Generation of photoluminescent ultrashort carbon nanotubes through nanoscale exciton localization at sp3 -defect sites

Noémie Danné; Mijin Kim; Antoine G. Godin; Hyejin Kwon; Zhenghong Gao; Xiaojian Wu; Nicolai F. Hartmann; Stephen K. Doorn; Brahim Lounis; YuHuang Wang; Laurent Cognet

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Stephen K. Doorn

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Nicolai F. Hartmann

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Brahim Lounis

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Laurent Cognet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Noémie Danné

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Kirill A. Velizhanin

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Zhenghong Gao

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Han Htoon

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Xuedan Ma

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Chuan-Fu Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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