Excitons in polycrystalline and disordered films of organic semiconductors have been shown to diffuse over distances of 10-50 nm. Here, using polarization- and wavelength-dependent photoconductivity in the highly ordered organic semiconductor rubrene, we show that the diffusion of triplet excitons in this material occurs over macroscopic distances (2-8 μm), comparable to the light absorption length. Dissociation of these excitons at the surface of the crystal is found to be the main source of photoconductivity in rubrene. In addition, we observe strong photoluminescence quenching and a simultaneous enhancement of photoconductivity when the crystal surface is functionalized with exciton splitters. In combination with time-resolved measurements, these observations strongly suggest that long-lived triplet excitons are indeed generated in molecular crystals by fission of singlets, and these triplets provide a significant contribution to the surface photocurrent generated in organic materials. Our findings indicate that the exciton diffusion bottleneck is not an intrinsic limitation of organic semiconductors.
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In ABO 3 perovskites, oxygen octahedron rotations are common structural distortions that can promote large ferroelectricity in BiFeO 3 with an R3c structure [1] but suppress ferroelectricity in CaTiO 3 with a Pbnm symmetry [2]. For many CaTiO 3 -like perovskites, the BiFeO 3 structure is a metastable phase. Here, we report the stabilization of the highly polar BiFeO 3 -like phase of CaTiO 3 in a BaTiO 3 =CaTiO 3 superlattice grown on a SrTiO 3 substrate. The stabilization is realized by a reconstruction of oxygen octahedron rotations at the interface from the pattern of nonpolar bulk CaTiO 3 to a different pattern that is characteristic of a BiFeO 3 phase. The reconstruction is interpreted through a combination of amplitude-contrast sub-0.1-nm high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and first-principles theories of the structure, energetics, and polarization of the superlattice and its constituents. We further predict a number of new artificial ferroelectric materials demonstrating that nonpolar perovskites can be turned into ferroelectrics via this interface mechanism. Therefore, a large number of perovskites with the CaTiO 3 structure type, which include many magnetic representatives, are now good candidates as novel highly polar multiferroic materials [3].
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