Exciton-phonon interaction calls for a revision of the "exciton" concept
Fulvio Paleari, Andrea Marini

TL;DR
This paper reveals that electron-phonon interactions decompose optical excitons into elemental excitons, challenging the traditional particle-like view and impacting the interpretation of excitonic phenomena in semiconductors.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework showing optical excitons are not fundamental particles but decompose into elemental excitons due to electron-phonon coupling, supported by first-principles calculations.
Findings
Homogeneous broadening of absorption peaks due to exciton-phonon interactions
Optical excitons evolve into elemental excitons without induced electric fields
Theoretical demonstration using many-body perturbation theory and first-principles methods
Abstract
The concept of \textit{optical} exciton - a photo-excited bound electron-hole pair within a crystal - is routinely used to interpret and model a wealth of excited-state phenomena in semiconductors. Beside originating sub-band gap signatures in optical spectra, optical excitons have also been predicted to condensate, diffuse, recombine, relax. However, all these phenomena are rooted on a theoretical definition of the excitonic state based on the following simple picture: "excitons" are actual particles that both appear as peaks in the linear absorption spectrum and also behave as well-defined quasiparticles. In this paper we show, instead, that the electron-phonon interaction decomposes the initial optical excitons into \textit{elemental} excitons, the latter being a different kind of bound electron-hole pairs lacking the effect caused by the induced, classical, electric field. This is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChalcogenide Semiconductor Thin Films · Semiconductor Quantum Structures and Devices · Molecular Junctions and Nanostructures
