Autor: |
West, Brantley A., Womick, Jordan M., McNeil, L. E., Tan, Ke Jie, Moran, Andrew M. |
Zdroj: |
The Journal of Physical Chemistry - Part B; 20240101, Issue: Preprints |
Abstrakt: |
Exciton sizes influence transport processes and spectroscopic phenomena in molecular aggregates and crystals. Thermally driven nuclear motion generally localizes electronic states in equilibrium systems. Exciton sizes also undergo dynamic changes caused by nonequilibrium relaxation in the lattice structure local to the photoexcitations (i.e., self-trapping). The α-phase of crystalline perylene is particularly well-suited for fundamental studies of exciton self-trapping mechanisms. It is generally agreed that a subpicosecond self-trapping process in α-perylene localizes photoexcited excitons onto pairs of closely spaced molecules (i.e., dimers), which then relax through excimer emission. Here, electronic relaxation dynamics in α-perylene single crystals are investigated using a variety of nonlinear optical spectroscopies in conjunction with a Frenkel exciton model. Linear absorption and photon echo spectroscopies suggest that excitons are delocalized over less than four unit cells (16 molecules) at 78 K prior to self-trapping. Stimulated Raman spectroscopies conducted on and off electronic resonance reveal significant vibronic coupling in a mode at 104 cm−1, which corresponds to the displacement between perylene molecules comprising a dimer. Strong vibronic coupling in this mode suggests that motion along the interdimer axis is instrumental in driving the self-trapping process. The results are discussed in the context of our recent study of tetracene and rubrene single crystals in which similar experiments and models were employed. |
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