How does the substrate affect the Raman and excited state spectra of a carbon nanotube?
Mathias Steiner, Marcus Freitag, James C. Tsang, Vasili Perebeinos,, Ageeth A. Bol, Antonio V. Failla, and Phaedon Avouris

TL;DR
This study investigates how the substrate influences the optical and vibrational properties of a semiconducting carbon nanotube, revealing substrate-induced shifts, resonance enhancements, and symmetry breaking effects through Raman and photoluminescence spectroscopy.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into substrate effects on CNT spectra, including resonance shifts, defect density variations, and symmetry breaking, using combined Raman and PL excitation spectroscopy.
Findings
Substrate causes a 50 meV red shift in E33 excitonic resonance.
Supported CNT segments show higher defect density and altered Raman peak ratios.
Laser power affects G phonon population and induces linear line shifts.
Abstract
We study the optical properties of a single, semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotube (CNT) that is partially suspended across a trench and partially supported by a SiO2-substrate. By tuning the laser excitation energy across the E33 excitonic resonance of the suspended CNT segment, the scattering intensities of the principal Raman transitions, the radial breathing mode (RBM), the G-mode and the D-mode show strong resonance enhancement of up to three orders of magnitude. In the supported part of the CNT, despite a loss of Raman scattering intensity of up to two orders of magnitude, we recover the E33 excitonic resonance suffering a substrate-induced red shift of 50 meV. The peak intensity ratio between G-band and D-band is highly sensitive to the presence of the substrate and varies by one order of magnitude, demonstrating the much higher defect density in the supported CNT…
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