Abstract

In ultraviolet light emission devices, excitons are a high-efficiency emission source. However, the mechanism of experimentally observed dependence of excitonic radiative lifetimes on temperature (T) has not been discovered. We present a numerical simulation based on the phonon-exciton-radiation system, which reveals that the dependence of the radiative lifetime of GaN excitons on T is dominated by the population distribution among discrete and continuum energy states. This finding is in contrast to an existing model considering the existence of 1S exciton only. This population distribution is determined by the temperature-dependent integrated effect of background carrier density and exciton energy broadening, which induces a combination of high-order excitonic states and the continuum. Various experimental results on the dependence on temperature, including the functions of T3/2 and higher or lower power of T, are interpreted by a model integrating the interactions with the electron and phononic fields. The proposed model elucidates the corresponding effects of electronic and phononic processes in this complex system and provides a platform for the discussion of Wannier exciton dynamics under various thermal conditions, including nonequilibrium cases beyond the Saha-Boltzmann relation in population distribution.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call