Computational study of geometry, electronic structure and low-lying excited states of linear T-graphene quantum dots
Arifa Nazir, Alok Shukla

TL;DR
This study uses first-principles and effective Hamiltonian models to analyze the geometry, electronic structure, and optical properties of linear T-graphene quantum dots, revealing their potential as photoluminescent materials.
Contribution
It introduces a combined DFT, TDDFT, and CI approach to investigate T-graphene quantum dots, a novel class of carbon nanostructures, and explores their optical and electronic properties.
Findings
TQDs are predicted to be photoluminescent.
HOMO-LUMO transitions are optically forbidden.
Large optical gaps suggest potential for exciton fission.
Abstract
A few years ago, by means of first-principles calculations, Enyashin et al.(2011) proposed several novel monolayers of carbon containing rings other than hexagons. One of those monolayers containing tetragons and octagons was investigated later in detail by Liu et al.(2012) who called it T-graphene, and found that it exists both in strictly planar and buckled forms, with the planar structure being metallic in nature. Given the fact that Kotakoski et al.(2011) had already found experimental evidence of 1D carbon structures containing tetragons and octagons, we decided to investigate finite linear fragments of T-graphene, with the strictly planar structures, referred to as T-graphene quantum dots (TQDs). In order to avoid the dangling bonds in the finite T-graphene fragments, we considered the edges to be saturated by hydrogen atoms. We first optimized the geometries of the considered…
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