Liquid-phase encapsulation of $\pi$-conjugated dyes in boron nitride nanotubes: Ensemble and single-nanotube optical characterization
Friedrich Sch\"oppler, Lukas Stumpf, Lucas Fuhl, Elena Behr, Charlotte Allard, Christoph Lambert, Richard Martel, Tobias Hertel

TL;DR
This study investigates the optical properties of dye molecules encapsulated in boron nitride nanotubes, revealing their heterogeneous, ordered, yet structurally variable nature through combined ensemble and single-nanotube spectroscopy.
Contribution
It provides a detailed characterization of dye@BNNT systems, distinguishing between aggregate formation and dielectric effects using multiple spectroscopic techniques.
Findings
Oligothiophenes in BNNTs form weakly emissive, heterogeneous ensembles.
No evidence of bright J-aggregate formation was observed.
Nile Red's response is dominated by dielectric tuning rather than aggregation.
Abstract
Boron nitride nanotubes (BNNTs) provide wide-bandgap, optically transparent one-dimensional hosts for molecular dyes, limiting direct electronic participation of the host. Whether dye@BNNT systems produce bright, well-defined J- or H-aggregates or instead heterogeneous emissive ensembles whose character depends on chain length and local packing remains only partly resolved. We address this question using ensemble extinction, photoluminescence, quantum-yield measurements, and TCSPC-derived radiative and non-radiative rates, together with polarization-resolved single-nanotube microscopy on encapsulated quaterthiophene, sexithiophene, octithiophene, and Nile Red, selected from a ten-dye screening. In the oligothiophene series, confinement modifies spectra and excited-state dynamics in a length-dependent manner, with all three oligothiophenes forming weakly emissive ensembles with…
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