Exciton self-trapping processes

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Abstract

Small-radius Frenkel excitons coupled with phonons can have diverse configurational structures depending on the symmetry of the electronic states involved and that of the associated modes of the inter-ionic/molecular vibrations. It is considered here that the symmetric excitons arise from the coupling with symmetry-retaining vibrational modes and vibronic excitons from the coupling to symmetry-breaking modes. Three examples are discussed: (i) formation of the barriers of exciton self trapping, as it occurs in the dimer formation at semiconductor surfaces, (ii) parity breaking that occurs at a centrosymmetric site and leads to an inversion electric dipole which enhances the polarizability and binding energy for pairing vibronic excitons, and (iii) a Bose condensation model of quasi-2D excitons applicable to the layered materials. © 1995 IUPAC

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Georgiev, M., Mihailov, L., & Singh, J. (1995). Exciton self-trapping processes. Pure and Applied Chemistry, 67(3), 447–456. https://doi.org/10.1351/pac199567030447

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