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Anisotropic 2D excitons unveiled in organic-inorganic quantum wells.

Authors :
Maserati, Lorenzo
Maserati, Lorenzo
Refaely-Abramson, Sivan
Kastl, Christoph
Chen, Christopher T
Borys, Nicholas J
Eisler, Carissa N
Collins, Mary S
Smidt, Tess E
Barnard, Edward S
Strasbourg, Matthew
Schriber, Elyse A
Shevitski, Brian
Yao, Kaiyuan
Hohman, J Nathan
Schuck, P James
Aloni, Shaul
Neaton, Jeffrey B
Schwartzberg, Adam M
Maserati, Lorenzo
Maserati, Lorenzo
Refaely-Abramson, Sivan
Kastl, Christoph
Chen, Christopher T
Borys, Nicholas J
Eisler, Carissa N
Collins, Mary S
Smidt, Tess E
Barnard, Edward S
Strasbourg, Matthew
Schriber, Elyse A
Shevitski, Brian
Yao, Kaiyuan
Hohman, J Nathan
Schuck, P James
Aloni, Shaul
Neaton, Jeffrey B
Schwartzberg, Adam M
Source :
Materials horizons; vol 8, iss 1, 197-208; 2051-6347
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Two-dimensional (2D) excitons arise from electron-hole confinement along one spatial dimension. Such excitations are often described in terms of Frenkel or Wannier limits according to the degree of exciton spatial localization and the surrounding dielectric environment. In hybrid material systems, such as the 2D perovskites, the complex underlying interactions lead to excitons of an intermediate nature, whose description lies somewhere between the two limits, and a better physical description is needed. Here, we explore the photophysics of a tuneable materials platform where covalently bonded metal-chalcogenide layers are spaced by organic ligands that provide confinement barriers for charge carriers in the inorganic layer. We consider self-assembled, layered bulk silver benzeneselenolate, [AgSePh]∞, and use a combination of transient absorption spectroscopy and ab initio GW plus Bethe-Salpeter equation calculations. We demonstrate that in this non-polar dielectric environment, strongly anisotropic excitons dominate the optical transitions of [AgSePh]∞. We find that the transient absorption measurements at room temperature can be understood in terms of low-lying excitons confined to the AgSe planes with in-plane anisotropy, featuring anisotropic absorption and emission. Finally, we present a pathway to control the exciton behaviour by changing the chalcogen in the material lattice. Our studies unveil unexpected excitonic anisotropies in an unexplored class of tuneable, yet air-stable, hybrid quantum wells, offering design principles for the engineering of an ordered, yet complex dielectric environment and its effect on the excitonic phenomena in such emerging materials.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Materials horizons; vol 8, iss 1, 197-208; 2051-6347
Notes :
application/pdf, Materials horizons vol 8, iss 1, 197-208 2051-6347
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1287289496
Document Type :
Electronic Resource