RQMP Research Seminar
Exciton polarons in two-dimensional hybrid metal-halide
perovskites
Carlos Silva
School of Chemistry and Biochemistry & School of
Physics Georgia Institute of Technology
While polarons — charges bound to a lattice deformation induced
by electron-phonon coupling — are primary photoexcitations at room
temperature in bulk metal-halide hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites (HOIP),
excitons — Coulomb-bound electron-hole pairs — are the stable
quasi-particles in their two-dimensional (2D) analogues. Here we address
the fundamental question: are polaronic effects consequential for excitons
in 2D-HIOPs? Based on our recent work, we argue that polaronic effects
are manifested intrinsically in the exciton spectral structure, which is
comprised of multiple non-degenerate resonances with constant inter-peak energy
spacing. We highlight measurements of population and dephasing dynamics that
point to the apparently deterministic role of polaronic effects in excitonic
properties. We contend that an interplay of long-range and short-range
exciton-lattice couplings give rise to exciton polarons, a character that
fundamentally establishes their effective mass and radius, and consequently,
their quantum dynamics. Given this complexity, a fundamentally far-reaching
issue is how Coulomb-mediated many-body interactions — elastic scattering
such as excitation-induced dephasing, inelastic exciton bimolecular scattering,
and multi-exciton binding — depend upon the specific exciton-lattice
coupling within the structured excitation lineshape. We measure the intrinsic
and density-dependent exciton dephasing rates of the multiple excitons and their
dependence on temperature by means of two-dimensional coherent excitation
spectroscopy. We find that diverse excitons display distinct intrinsic
dephasing rates mediated by phonon scattering involving different effective
phonons, and contrasting rates of exciton-exciton elastic scattering. These
findings establish specifically the consequence of distinct lattice dressing
on exciton many-body quantum dynamics, which critically define fundamental
optical properties that underpin photonics and quantum optoelectronics.
Thursday, September 10th 2020, 10:30
Tele-seminar
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