Chen Y-J, Muñoz Caro G M, Aparicio S, Jiménez-Escobar A, Lasne J, Rosu-Finsen A, McCoustra M R S, Cassidy A M, Field D
Department of Physics, National Central University, Jhongli District, Taoyuan City 32054, Taiwan.
Centro de Astrobiología (CSIC-INTA), Ctra. de Ajalvir, km 4, Torrejón de Ardoz, 28850 Madrid, Spain.
Phys Rev Lett. 2017 Oct 13;119(15):157703. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.119.157703.
The absorption of light to create Wannier-Mott excitons is a fundamental feature dictating the optical and photovoltaic properties of low band gap, high permittivity semiconductors. Such excitons, with an electron-hole separation an order of magnitude greater than lattice dimensions, are largely limited to these semiconductors but here we find evidence of Wannier-Mott exciton formation in solid carbon monoxide (CO) with a band gap of >8 eV and a low electrical permittivity. This is established through the observation that a change of a few degrees K in deposition temperature can shift the electronic absorption spectra of solid CO by several hundred wave numbers, coupled with the recent discovery that deposition of CO leads to the spontaneous formation of electric fields within the film. These so-called spontelectric fields, here approaching 4×10^{7} V m^{-1}, are strongly temperature dependent. We find that a simple electrostatic model reproduces the observed temperature dependent spectral shifts based on the Stark effect on a hole and electron residing several nm apart, identifying the presence of Wannier-Mott excitons. The spontelectric effect in CO simultaneously explains the long-standing enigma of the sensitivity of vacuum ultraviolet spectra to the deposition temperature.
吸收光以产生万尼尔 - 莫特激子是决定低带隙、高介电常数半导体光学和光伏特性的一个基本特征。这种激子的电子 - 空穴分离距离比晶格尺寸大一个数量级,在很大程度上仅限于这些半导体,但在这里我们发现了在带隙大于8 eV且介电常数低的固态一氧化碳(CO)中形成万尼尔 - 莫特激子的证据。这是通过观察到沉积温度变化几度K就能使固态CO的电子吸收光谱移动数百波数而得以证实的,同时结合最近的发现,即CO的沉积会导致薄膜内自发形成电场。这些所谓的自发电场,在这里接近4×10⁷ V m⁻¹,强烈依赖于温度。我们发现一个简单的静电模型基于对相距几纳米的空穴和电子的斯塔克效应,再现了观察到的与温度相关的光谱位移,从而确定了万尼尔 - 莫特激子的存在。CO中的自发电效应同时解释了真空紫外光谱对沉积温度敏感性这一长期存在的谜团。