FUNCTIONALIZATION OF SWNTS WITH COUMARIN-LABELED POLYMERS
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Abstract
Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) are a new class of materials that
have recently attracted a great deal of interest because of their unique structural,
mechanical, and electronic properties. Also, SWNTs have a high potential for a
number of technological applications, including molecular electronics, emissive
devices, and photovoltaic devices. To fully utilize their unique properties, control
ofthe solubility, processibility, and functionality of SWNTs is required. Therefore
chemical functionalization of SWNTs using a variety of methods, in either
covalent or noncovalent manner, has been developed to produce soluble nanotube
composites coupled with various chemical moieties. To explore the possibility of
making potential soluble nanotube-based materials for solar cells, SWNTs were
functionalized with organic chromophore-labeled polymers via a radical coupling
process. The organic chromophore was used to absorb light to produce
photo-induced electrons, while the polymer chains were used for improving the
solubility of SWNTs. These novel chromophore-labeled polymers were made by
stable free radical polymerization (SFRP), either using a synthetic
chromophore-functionalized styrenic monomer or by derivatizing well-defined
polystyrenes. Specifically, the chromophores employed in this investigation were commercially available 7-hydroxycoumarin and coumarin-343. In order to carry
out fluorescence studies of SWNT-coumarin composites systematically, various
factors were probed by (1) altering polystyrene lengths between the SWNT and
the coumarin; (2) changing the distribution of coumarins along the polymer chain,
in the form of either a block or random copolymer; (3) placing single coumarins
on the surface of SWNTs. All of these resulting polymer functionalized SWNTs
were found to be soluble in certain organic solvents such as CHCI3. Different
absorption behaviors have been observed for SWNTs functionalized with
7-hydroxycoumarin containing copolymers. Fluorescence was still observable for
all ofthese composites, and the k-k interactions between coumarins and nanotubes
were believed to be responsible for the broadening of emission bands of the
resulting composites.