Bromophenyl functionalization of carbon nanotubes : an ab initio study
Jason Beaudin, Jonathan Laflamme Janssen, Nicholas D. M. Hine, Peter, D. Haynes, Michel C\^ot\'e

TL;DR
This study uses density-functional theory to analyze how bromophenyl molecules attach to carbon nanotubes, revealing diameter and electronic character effects on binding energies and activation barriers, with implications for nanotube functionalization.
Contribution
First ab initio investigation of bromophenyl functionalization on nanotubes, detailing diameter dependence, hybridization changes, and metallic versus insulating reactivity differences.
Findings
Binding energy decreases with nanotube diameter.
Metallic nanotubes are more reactive than semiconducting ones.
A 1/R^2 radius dependence of binding energy is confirmed.
Abstract
We study the thermodynamics of bromophenyl functionalization of carbon nanotubes with respect to diameter and metallic/insulating character using density-functional theory (DFT). On one hand, we show that the activation energy for the grafting of a bromophenyl molecule onto a semiconducting zigzag nanotube ranges from 0.73 eV to 0.76 eV without any clear trend with respect to diameter within numerical accuracy. On the other hand, the binding energy of a single bromophenyl molecule shows a clear diameter dependence and ranges from 1.51 eV for a (8,0) zigzag nanotube to 0.83 eV for a (20,0) zigzag nanotube. This is in part explained by the transition from sp2 to sp3 bonding occurring to a carbon atom of a nanotube when a phenyl is grafted to it and the fact that smaller nanotubes are closer to a sp3 hybridization than larger ones due to increased curvature. Since a second bromophenyl unit…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCarbon Nanotubes in Composites · Molecular Junctions and Nanostructures · Fullerene Chemistry and Applications
