In order to reconsider the photoluminescence mechanism in hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H), the lifetime distribution of photoluminescence, G(\ensuremath{\tau}), was evaluated over a wide lifetime range between 5.3\ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{}${10}^{\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}7}$ s and 8.0\ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{}${10}^{\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}2}$ s using frequency-resolved spectroscopy. The most remarkable finding is that G(\ensuremath{\tau}) is dominated by two kinds of lifetime components characterized by specific peak lifetimes at low temperatures. At 12 K, only the lifetime component peaked at about 1 ms is dominant, whereas another component appears distinctively at around 10 \ensuremath{\mu}s and grows gradually with increasing temperature. Such a discontinuous change of the lifetime from 1 ms to 10 \ensuremath{\mu}s takes place at temperatures lower than 60 K where the photoluminescence intensity is almost constant. Interestingly, the peak lifetimes for both lifetime components are quite insensitive to the Urbach energy or the emission energy as long as the excitation intensity is held low enough to satisfy the condition for geminate-pair recombination. These characteristic features observed in G(\ensuremath{\tau}) do not reconcile with the generally accepted model of tunneling recombination between carriers trapped at the tail states after thermalization. In particular, dominance of the 1-ms lifetime component at 12 K is interpreted following the model as the electron-hole separation enlarges up to a value corresponding to the 1-ms recombination after photogeneration.However, it is hard to understand the absence of the 10-\ensuremath{\mu}s lifetime component at 12 K, since the 10-\ensuremath{\mu}s recombination is expected to take place at much shorter electron-hole separation and is actually observed at elevated temperatures. Because of the several arguments against the generally accepted model and of the coexistence of two lifetime components having specific peak lifetimes, it is more appropriate to consider that the photoluminescence in a-Si:H comes from special localized luminescent centers corresponding to the respective lifetime components. Since the lifetime changes discontinuously from 1 ms to 10 \ensuremath{\mu}s with increasing temperature while the luminescence intensity remains constant at the low temperatures, some correlation is expected to exist between the two kinds of luminescent centers.
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