Nature Nanotechnology, Vol.10, No.3, 248-252, 2015
Asymmetric dyes align inside carbon nanotubes to yield a large nonlinear optical response
Asymmetric dye molecules have unusual optical and electronic properties(1-3). For instance, they show a strong second-order nonlinear optical (NLO) response that has attracted great interest for potential applications in electro-optic modulators for optical telecommunications and in wavelength conversion of lasers(2,3). However, the strong Coulombic interaction between the large dipole moments of these molecules favours a pairwise antiparallel alignment that cancels out the NLO response when incorporated into bulk materials. Here, we show that by including an elongated dipolar dye (p,p'-dimethylaminonitrostilbene, DANS, a prototypical asymmetric dye with a strong NLO response(4)) inside single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs)(5,6), an ideal head-to-tail alignment in which all electric dipoles point in the same sense is naturally created. We have applied this concept to synthesize solution-processible DANS-filled SWCNTs that show an extremely large total dipole moment and static hyperpolarizability (beta(o) = 9,800 x 10(-30) e.s.u.), resulting from the coherent alignment of arrays of similar to 70 DANS molecules.