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Stimulating Phonon Bottleneck Effect in Organic Semiconductors by Charge-Transfer-Mediated J-Aggregation.

Jiawen FangPing LiLongyan ZhangXiuzhi LiJingyu ZhangChaochao QinTushar DebnathWei HuangRunfeng Chen
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Hot carriers rapidly lose kinetic energies on a subpicosecond time scale, posing significant limitations on semiconductors' photon-conversion efficiencies. To slow the hot carrier cooling, the phonon bottleneck effect is constructed prevalently in quantum-confined structures with discrete energy levels. However, the maximum energy separation (Δ E ES ) between the energy levels is in a range of several hundred meV, leading to unsatisfactory cooling time. To address this, we design a novel organic semiconductor capable of forming intermolecular charge transfer (CT) in J-aggregates, where the lowest singlet excited state (S 1 ) splits into two states due to the significant interplay between the Coulomb interaction and intermolecular CT coupling. The Δ E ES between the two states can be adjusted up to 1.02 eV, and an extremely slow carrier cooling process of ∼72.3 ps was observed by femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Moreover, the phonon bottleneck effect was identified in organic materials for the first time, and CT-mediated J-aggregation with short-range interactions was found to be the key to achieving large Δ E ES . The significantly prolonged carrier cooling time, compared to <100 fs in the isolated molecule (10 -6 M), highlights the potential of organic molecules with diversified aggregation structures in achieving long-lived hot carriers. These findings provide valuable insights into the intrinsic photophysics of electron-phonon scattering in organic semiconductors.
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