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By employing the first-principles calculations, we investigate electronic properties of a novel carbon nanostructure called a carbon nanobud, in which a $C_{60}$ molecule covalently attaches or embeds in an armchair carbon nanotube. We find that the carbon nanobud exhibits either semiconducting or metallic behavior, depending on the size of the nanotube, as well as the combination mode. Moreover, with respect to the case of the corresponding pristine nanotubes, some new electronic states appear at 0.3-0.8 eV above the Fermi level for the carbon nanobuds with the attaching mode, which agrees well with the experimental reports. In addition, the vibrational properties of the carbon nanobuds are explored. The characteristic Raman active modes for both $C_{60}$ and the corresponding pristine nanotube present in Raman spectra of the carbon nanobuds with attaching modes, consistent with the observations of a recent experiment. In contrast, such situation does not appear for the case of the carbon nanobud with the embedding mode. This indicates that the synthesized carbon nanobuds are probably of the attaching configuration rather than the embedding configuration.
The electronic Raman scattering (ERS) features of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) can reveal a wealth of information about their electronic structures, but have previously been thought to appear exclusively in metallic (M-) but not in semicond
We report experimental measurements of electronic Raman scattering under resonant conditions by electrons in individual single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs). The inelastic Raman scattering at low frequency range reveals a single particle excitation
Graphite is a well-studied material with known electronic and optical properties. Graphene, on the other hand, which is just one layer of carbon atoms arranged in a hexagonal lattice, has been studied theoretically for quite some time but has only re
A theoretical study of the electronic properties of nanodisks and nanocones is presented within the framework of a tight-binding scheme. The electronic densities of states and absorption coefficients are calculated for such structures with different
We present a tight binding theory to analyze the motion of electrons between carbon nanotubes bundled into a carbon nanotube rope. The theory is developed starting from a description of the propagating Bloch waves on ideal tubes, and the effects of i