Issue 20, 2024

Radiative pumping in a strongly coupled microcavity filled with a neat molecular film showing excimer emission

Abstract

Strong light-matter interactions have attracted much attention as a means to control the physical/chemical properties of organic semiconducting materials with light-matter hybrids called polaritons. To unveil the processes under strong coupling, studies on the dynamics of polaritons are of particular importance. While highly condensed molecular materials with large dipole density are ideal to achieve strong coupling, the emission properties of such films often become a mixture of monomeric and excimeric components, making the role of excimers unclear. Here, we use amorphous neat films of a new bis(phenylethynyl anthracene) derivative showing only excimer emission and investigate the excited-state dynamics of a series of strongly coupled microcavities, with each cavity being characterised by a different exciton–photon detuning. A time-resolved photoluminescence study shows that the excimer radiatively pumps the lower polariton in the relaxation process and the decay profile reflects the density of states. The delayed emission derived from triplet–triplet annihilation is not sensitive to the cavity environment, possibly due to the rapid excimer formation. Our results highlight the importance of controlling intermolecular interactions towards rational design of organic exciton–polariton devices, whose performance depends on efficient polariton relaxation pathways.

Graphical abstract: Radiative pumping in a strongly coupled microcavity filled with a neat molecular film showing excimer emission

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Jan 2024
Accepted
29 Apr 2024
First published
30 Apr 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2024,26, 14745-14753

Radiative pumping in a strongly coupled microcavity filled with a neat molecular film showing excimer emission

Y. Sasaki, K. Georgiou, S. Wang, D. G. Bossanyi, R. Jayaprakash, N. Yanai, N. Kimizuka, D. G. Lidzey, A. J. Musser and J. Clark, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2024, 26, 14745 DOI: 10.1039/D4CP00255E

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