Publication | Open Access
Polarized light emission from individual incandescent carbon nanotubes
28
Citations
30
References
2011
Year
Optical MaterialsEngineeringNanoscale LampsLuminescence PropertyThermal RadiationCarbon-based MaterialOptical PropertiesNanoelectronicsCarbon NanotubesNanotube WallNanophotonicsElectrical EngineeringPhysicsNew Lighting TechnologyFilament ConsistingNanomaterialsGraphene FiberApplied PhysicsGrapheneGraphene NanoribbonNanotubesOptoelectronicsLight Emission
We fabricate nanoscale lamps which have a filament consisting of a single multiwalled carbon nanotube. After determining the nanotube geometry with a transmission electron microscope, we use Joule heating to bring the filament to incandescence, with peak temperatures in excess of 2000 K. We image the thermal light in both polarizations simultaneously as a function of wavelength and input electrical power. The observed degree of polarization is typically of the order of 75%, a magnitude predicted by a Mie model of the filament that assigns graphene's optical conductance $\ensuremath{\pi}{e}^{2}/2h$ to each nanotube wall.
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