麻豆淫院


This article has been reviewed according to Science X's and . have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

fact-checked

peer-reviewed publication

trusted source

proofread

Excitons in organic semiconductors: Unraveling their quantum entanglement and dynamics

Research reveals the dynamics of excitons
Adjacent 饾湅 -stacked molecular columns (represented by their carbon-carbon bonds) in the lattice of orthorhombic rubrene, in 饾憦 -axis (left) and 饾憪 -axis (right) projections, with the 饾憥 , 饾憦 , 饾憪 crystal axes used in this work. Credit: Gerald Curran et al

Excitons, encountered in technologies like solar cells and TVs, are quasiparticles formed by an electron and a positively charged "hole," moving together in a semiconductor. Created when an electron is excited to a higher energy state, excitons transfer energy without carrying a net charge. While their behavior in traditional semiconductors is well understood, excitons act differently in organic semiconductors.

Recent research led by condensed matter physicist Ivan Biaggio focuses on understanding the mechanisms behind dynamics, quantum entanglement, and dissociation in organic molecular crystals.

The paper is in the journal 麻豆淫院ical Review Letters.

In organic materials, excitons must first move through the material to then dissociate and generate a usable current. Biaggio's lab uses lasers to excite these particles and observe their quantum-level interactions. Researchers track exciton behavior via and fluorescence, analyzing "quantum beats" to study complex processes like , triplet transport, and triplet fusion. Singlet fission splits an initial excitation (with spin 0, called a singlet) into two triplet excitons (each with spin 1) that still maintain a combined spin of 0 in an entangled quantum state.

The lab is investigating the properties of a quantum-entangled pair of triplet excitons that is generated after photoexcitation. Biaggio and his team grow rubrene crystals, an organic semiconductor that possesses and allows for singlet exciton fission, then use lasers to selectively excite and detect specific excitons. They exploit the processes by which the excitons absorb light of different wavelengths, and that allow two triplet excitons to emit a photon when they meet each other.

"The detection of fluorescence decay, and the high frequency ripples caused by the quantum-entanglement, are a quantum mechanical way to observe what's going on," says Biaggio, Joseph A. Waldschmitt Chair in 麻豆淫院ics.

"It is indirect because it relies on the detection of what these excitons do, not in terms of dissociating and creating current, but in terms of wandering around in the crystal, then at some point meeting with each other again, and re-emitting light. Or we can catch them as they are created using other laser pulses that observe their appearance and track them. In this way, we can then track the phenomenon of these excitons being born from the initial photoexcited state, which takes about 10 picoseconds."

Biaggio's latest experiments are examining how the of triplet exciton pairs can persist as the two excitons wander around independently in the crystal. His experiments unearthed a process in which the clocks of triplet-exciton pairs can get out of synch, even though each clock keeps ticking at the same frequency.

This research might possibly aid development or quantum information science. The long-term goal is to better understand fundamental exciton behaviors, which might eventually influence applications in solar energy harvesting, or possibly, quantum computing.

More information: Gerald Curran et al, Persistence of Spin Coherence in a Crystalline Environment, 麻豆淫院ical Review Letters (2024). . On arXiv:

Journal information: 麻豆淫院ical Review Letters , arXiv

Provided by Lehigh University

Citation: Excitons in organic semiconductors: Unraveling their quantum entanglement and dynamics (2025, February 10) retrieved 14 May 2025 from /news/2025-02-excitons-semiconductors-unraveling-quantum-entanglement.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Chiral molecular self-assemblies that absorb light boost singlet fission process, research demonstrates

83 shares

Feedback to editors