time resolved photoluminescence
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Author(s):  
Clemens Zeiser ◽  
Adam Jacob Berges ◽  
Tim Rammler ◽  
Frederik Munko ◽  
Alfred Johann Meixner ◽  
...  

Abstract The application potential of singlet fission (SF), describing the spontaneous conversion of an excited singlet into two triplets, underlines the necessity to independently control SF rates, energetics and the optical band gap. Heterofission, whereby the singlet splits into triplets on chemically distinct chromophores, is a promising approach to control the above-mentioned parameters, but its details are not yet fully understood. Here, we investigate the photophysics of blends of two prototypical SF chromophores, tetracene (TET) and rubrene (RUB) using time-resolved photoluminescence spectroscopy and time-correlated single photon counting (TCSPC) to explore the potential for heterofission in combinations of endothermic SF chromophores.


2021 ◽  
pp. 2101326
Author(s):  
Milian Kaiser ◽  
Yang Li ◽  
Isabel Allegro ◽  
Bryce S. Richards ◽  
Ulrich Wilhelm Paetzold ◽  
...  

2D Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suman Chatterjee ◽  
Sarthak Das ◽  
Garima Gupta ◽  
Kenji Watanabe ◽  
Takashi Taniguchi ◽  
...  

Abstract The monolayers of semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides host strongly bound excitonic complexes and are an excellent platform for exploring many-body physics. Here we demonstrate a controlled kinetic manipulation of the five-particle excitonic complex, the charged biexciton, through a systematic dependence of the biexciton peak on excitation power, gate voltage, and temperature using steady-state and time-resolved photoluminescence (PL). With the help of a combination of the experimental data and a rate equation model, we argue that the binding energy of the charged biexciton is less than the spectral separation of its peak from the neutral exciton. We also note that while the momentum-direct radiative recombination of the neutral exciton is restricted within the light cone, such restriction is relaxed for a charged biexciton recombination due to the presence of near-parallel excited and final states in the momentum space.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Joseph Gallaher

<p>Organic photovoltaic (OPV) cells show significant promise as a renewable energy resource capable of meeting the world’s large and growing energy needs. Increasing device efficiency is central to achieving an economically viable option for widespread applications. To this end, a better understanding of the structure and dynamics of the electronic excited states is needed. In particular, the mechanism by which excitons (electron-hole pairs) escape their Coulombic attraction and generate photocurrent is yet to be established. In this thesis ultrafast laser spectroscopy, in particular transient absorption and time-resolved photoluminescence, are used to study: exciton relaxation, morphological effects on charge separation, and the pathway leading to triplet exciton states.  In Chapter 3, a series of oligothiophenes are synthesised with well-defined conjugation lengths to act as molecular models of polymer backbone sub-units, and thereby probe exciton relaxation processes. Time-resolved photoluminescence (TRPL) and transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy measurements presented in Chapter 4 reveal emission signatures evolve from a mirror image of absorption - which lacks vibronic structure - towards a spectrally narrower and vibronically structured species on the hundreds of femtosecond to early picosecond timescale. Analysis of this spectral evolution shows that a broad distribution of torsional conformers is driven to rapidly planarize in the excited state, including in solid films. This provides evidence that both torsional relaxation and energy migration could contribute to the non-mirror image absorption-emission spectra observed in polymer thin films.  Recently, long lived TA signatures have been attributed to triplet excited states with the suggested formation pathway being similar to organic light emitting diodes, whereby non-geminate (bimolecular) charge recombination leads to the formation of both singlet and triplet states. Isolated oligothiophenes in solution provide an ideal model system to investigate the role of structural relaxation on triplet exciton formation. Through analysis of TA spectral dynamics in Chapter 5, singlet and triplet exciton populations were tracked. Restriction of the torsional relaxation increased triplet yield suggesting vibrational hot states could drive triplet formation. This model could aid in understanding triplet exciton formation in polymer-based solar cells via spin-mixing instead of non-geminate recombination.  In a series of polymer:fullerene blends, the link between the nature of polymerfullerene intermixing and charge generation pathways was investigated. It is shown in Chapter 6 that free charge generation is most efficient in a 3-phase morphology that features intimately mixed polymer:fullerene regions amongst neat polymer and fullerene phases. Distinct spectroscopic signatures made it possible to determine whether holes occupy disordered or crystalline polymer chains. TA spectral dynamics reveal the migration of holes from intermixed to pure olymer regions in 3-phase morphology blends, which contrasted with observations in 2-phase blends. The energy gradient between the intermixed and phase-pure regions may be sufficient to drive efficient separation of charge pairs initially generated in intermixed regions, with free charges subsequently percolating through these phase-pure domains.  The photophysics of a high performance polymer:polymer blend is studied in Chapter 7 in an effort to elucidate how these blends can rival their polymer:fullerene counterparts. Optical spectroscopy reveals incomplete exciton dissociation and rapid geminate recombination in the blends. This is shown to result from a largely phase-separated morphology with domains greater than the exciton diffusion length. Significant loss of charge carriers on early timescales highlights increasing polymer: polymer solar cell efficiency requires optimizing blend morphology to realise facile charge separation.  Taken together, this thesis presents a valuable spectroscopic insight into the pathway of efficient charge separation and the importance of both blend morphology and polymer structure.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Joseph Gallaher

<p>Organic photovoltaic (OPV) cells show significant promise as a renewable energy resource capable of meeting the world’s large and growing energy needs. Increasing device efficiency is central to achieving an economically viable option for widespread applications. To this end, a better understanding of the structure and dynamics of the electronic excited states is needed. In particular, the mechanism by which excitons (electron-hole pairs) escape their Coulombic attraction and generate photocurrent is yet to be established. In this thesis ultrafast laser spectroscopy, in particular transient absorption and time-resolved photoluminescence, are used to study: exciton relaxation, morphological effects on charge separation, and the pathway leading to triplet exciton states.  In Chapter 3, a series of oligothiophenes are synthesised with well-defined conjugation lengths to act as molecular models of polymer backbone sub-units, and thereby probe exciton relaxation processes. Time-resolved photoluminescence (TRPL) and transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy measurements presented in Chapter 4 reveal emission signatures evolve from a mirror image of absorption - which lacks vibronic structure - towards a spectrally narrower and vibronically structured species on the hundreds of femtosecond to early picosecond timescale. Analysis of this spectral evolution shows that a broad distribution of torsional conformers is driven to rapidly planarize in the excited state, including in solid films. This provides evidence that both torsional relaxation and energy migration could contribute to the non-mirror image absorption-emission spectra observed in polymer thin films.  Recently, long lived TA signatures have been attributed to triplet excited states with the suggested formation pathway being similar to organic light emitting diodes, whereby non-geminate (bimolecular) charge recombination leads to the formation of both singlet and triplet states. Isolated oligothiophenes in solution provide an ideal model system to investigate the role of structural relaxation on triplet exciton formation. Through analysis of TA spectral dynamics in Chapter 5, singlet and triplet exciton populations were tracked. Restriction of the torsional relaxation increased triplet yield suggesting vibrational hot states could drive triplet formation. This model could aid in understanding triplet exciton formation in polymer-based solar cells via spin-mixing instead of non-geminate recombination.  In a series of polymer:fullerene blends, the link between the nature of polymerfullerene intermixing and charge generation pathways was investigated. It is shown in Chapter 6 that free charge generation is most efficient in a 3-phase morphology that features intimately mixed polymer:fullerene regions amongst neat polymer and fullerene phases. Distinct spectroscopic signatures made it possible to determine whether holes occupy disordered or crystalline polymer chains. TA spectral dynamics reveal the migration of holes from intermixed to pure olymer regions in 3-phase morphology blends, which contrasted with observations in 2-phase blends. The energy gradient between the intermixed and phase-pure regions may be sufficient to drive efficient separation of charge pairs initially generated in intermixed regions, with free charges subsequently percolating through these phase-pure domains.  The photophysics of a high performance polymer:polymer blend is studied in Chapter 7 in an effort to elucidate how these blends can rival their polymer:fullerene counterparts. Optical spectroscopy reveals incomplete exciton dissociation and rapid geminate recombination in the blends. This is shown to result from a largely phase-separated morphology with domains greater than the exciton diffusion length. Significant loss of charge carriers on early timescales highlights increasing polymer: polymer solar cell efficiency requires optimizing blend morphology to realise facile charge separation.  Taken together, this thesis presents a valuable spectroscopic insight into the pathway of efficient charge separation and the importance of both blend morphology and polymer structure.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sabina Gurung ◽  
Asha Singh ◽  
J Jayabalan

Abstract Metal-semiconductor hybrid colloid is an emerging paradigm for construction of advanced materials having multiple functionalities. In such colloids, the ratio between the number of metal nanoparticles (NP) to the number of semiconductor quantum dots (QD) plays an important role in controlling the properties of the final hybrid colloid. We study the effect of mixing ratio of Ag NPs to the CdTe QDs on the photoluminscence (PL) properties of the final mixed hybrid colloid. Using steady-state and time-resolved photoluminescence, it has been shown that when exciton and plasmon spectrally overlap in a hybrid, the amplitude of the decay component of PL depends on the excitation energy. Such dependence is not observed in the case of hybrid where exciton and plasmon are spectrally separated. This study contributes to the appropriate selection of the shape of metal NPs in designing a hybrid material that is well suited for optoelectronic device applications.


2021 ◽  
Vol 130 (16) ◽  
pp. 163105
Author(s):  
John Moseley ◽  
Dmitry Krasikov ◽  
Chungho Lee ◽  
Darius Kuciauskas

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