3 research outputs found
Spatially, Temporally and Polarization-Resolved Photoluminescence Exploration of Excitons in Crystalline Phthalocyanine Thin Films
The lack of long range order in organic semiconductor thin films prevents the
unveiling of the complete nature of excitons in optical experiments, because
the diffraction limited beam diameters in the bandgap region far exceed typical
crystalline grain sizes. Here we present spatially-, temporally- and
polarization-resolved dual photoluminescence/linear dichroism microscopy
experiments that investigate exciton states within a single crystalline grain
in solution-processed phthalocyanine thin films. These experiments reveal the
existence of a delocalized singlet exciton, polarized along the high mobility
axis in this quasi-1D electronic system. The strong delocalized {\pi} orbitals
overlap controlled by the molecular stacking along the high mobility axis is
responsible for breaking the radiative recombination selection rules. Using our
linear dichroism scanning microscopy setup we further established a rotation of
molecules (i.e. a structural phase transition) that occurs above 100 K prevents
the observation of this exciton at room temperature.Comment: submitted to Journal of Chem Phys letter
Macroscopic Molecular Ordering and Exciton Delocalization in Crystalline Phthalocyanine Thin Films
We present spatially-, temporally-
and polarization-resolved dual
photoluminescence/linear dichroism microscopy experiments that investigate
the correlation between long-range order and the nature of exciton
states in solution-processed phthalocyanine thin films. The influence
of grain boundaries and disorder is absent in these films because
typical grain sizes are 3 orders of magnitude larger than focused
excitation beam diameters. These experiments reveal the existence
of a delocalized singlet exciton, polarized along the high mobility
axis in this quasi-1D electronic system. The strong delocalized π
orbitals overlap, controlled by the molecular stacking along the high
mobility axis, is responsible for breaking the radiative recombination
selection rules. Using our linear dichroism scanning microscopy setup,
we further established that a rotation of molecules (i.e., a structural
phase transition) that occurs above 100 K prevents the observation
of this exciton at room temperature