Singlet-to-triplet intermediates and triplet exciton dynamics in pentacene thinfilms
ORAL
Abstract
Singlet-to-triplet fission in organic semiconductors is a spin-conserving multiexciton process in which one spin-zero singlet excitation is converted into two spin-one triplet excitations on an ultrafast timescale. Current scientific interest into this carrier multiplication process is largely driven by prospects of enhancing the efficiency in photovoltaic applications by generating two long-lived triplet excitons by one photon. The fission process is known to involve intermediate states, known as correlated triplet pairs, with an overall singlet character, before being interchanged into uncorrelated triplets. Here we use broadband femtosecond real-time spectroscopy to study the excited state dynamics in pentacene thin films, elucidating the fission process and the role of intermediate triplet states.
–
Authors
-
Verner Thorsmolle
Department of Physics, University of California, San Diego, University of California San Diego
-
Michael Korber
University of Konstanz
-
Emanuel Obergfell
Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, University of Konstanz
-
Thomas Kuhlman
Technical University of Denmark
-
Ian Campbell
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Brian Crone
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Antoinette Taylor
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Richard Averitt
University of California, San Diego Physics Department, Department of Physics, University of California, San Diego, University of California San Diego
-
Jure Demsar
Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, University of Konstanz