Picosecond time resolved photoluminescence spectroscopy of a tetracene film on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite: Dynamical relaxation, trap emission, and superradiance
Abstract
A detailed time resolved investigation of the photoluminescence of a thin tetracene film deposited on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite is presented. In agreement with Lim [Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 107402 (2004)], we find strong evidence for superradiance: an increase of the relative intensity of the pure electronic transition with respect to the vibronic sideband and a concomitant decrease of the radiative lifetime from 10 to 1.83 ns upon cooling from 300 to 4 K. For lower temperatures, a redshift (∼200 cm-1) of the free exciton is observed. Previously, this shift was attributed to a structural phase transition. Our time resolved spectra reveal that the spectral shift is related to a dynamical relaxation process which occurs within the first 50 ps. © 2007 American Institute of Physics.