Electron-electron interactions in general lead to both ground state and
excited state confinement. We show, however, that in phenyl-substituted
polyacetylenes electron-electron interactions cause enhanced delocalization of
quasiparticles in the optically excited state from the backbone polyene chain
into the phenyl groups, which in turn leads to enhanced confinement in the
chain direction. This co-operative delocalization--confinement lowers the
energy of the one-photon state and raises the relative energy of the lowest
two-photon state. The two-photon state is slightly below the optical state in
mono-phenyl substituted polyacetylenes, but above the optical state in
di-phenyl substituted polyacetylenes, thereby explaining the strong
photoluminescence of the latter class of materials. We present a detailed
mechanism of the crossover in the energies of the one- and two-photon states in
these systems. In addition, we calculate the optical absorption spectra over a
wide wavelength region, and make specific predictions for the polarizations of
low and high energy transitions that can be tested on oriented samples. Within
existing theories of light emission from π-conjugated polymers, strong
photoluminescence should be restricted to materials whose optical gaps are
larger than that of trans-polyacetylene. The present work show that
conceptually at least, it is possible to have light emission from systems with
smaller optical gaps.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables included in the tex