Long-Lived Charge-Transfer Excitons in a Graphene-PTCDI-TiOPc Trilayer Heterostructure (Dataset)

Abstract

The excel file contains all experimental data. The zip file contains all code and data of DFT calculations presented in Figure 5.Excitation transfer across the interfaces between graphene, perylenetetracarboxylic diimide (PTCDI), and titanyl phthalocyanine (TiOPc) was studied using transient absorption and photoluminescence spectroscopy. Both photoluminescence quenching and transient absorption measurements confirm the presence of a type-II interface between PTCDI and TiOPc. While the graphene/PTCDI interface is expected to exhibit type-I behavior, transient absorption measurements indicate that only electrons transfer from PTCDI to graphene, with no evidence of hole transfer. Density functional theory calculations reveal significant ground-state electron transfer from graphene to PTCDI, resulting in band bending that prevents excited holes from transferring from PTCDI to graphene. This feature is exploited in a trilayer heterostructure of graphene/PTCDI/TiOPc, where the spatial separation of photoexcited electrons and holes in graphene and TiOPc, respectively, leads to the formation of long-lived photoexcitations with a lifetime of approximately 500 ps. Furthermore, spatially resolved transient absorption measurements reveal the immobile nature of these excitations, confirming that they are charge-transfer excitons rather than free electrons and holes. These results provide valuable insights into the complex interlayer photoexcitation transfer properties and demonstrate precise control over layer population and the recombination lifetime of photocarriers in such hybrid heterostructures

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KU ScholarWorks (Univ. of Kansas)

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Last time updated on 27/04/2025

This paper was published in KU ScholarWorks (Univ. of Kansas).

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