Abstract
Fluorescence spectra of single terrylene molecules adsorbed on hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) flakes were recorded at cryogenic temperatures. The pure electronic transitions of terrylene molecules are spread over a broad energy scale, from 570 to 610 nm. Surprisingly, peaks in the vibrationally resolved fluorescence spectrum show intensity variations up to 20-fold between molecules. We find an extreme case where the Debye-Waller-Franck-Condon factor of the zero-phonon line exceeds 0.8. The vibronic intensity correlates both with the spectral position of the electronic transition and with the frequency of the longitudinal stretch mode, which varies between 243 and 257 cm-1. By means of DFT calculations, we show that these observations can be explained by terrylene chemisorption on charge-donating defect sites. The electronic states of molecules at such chemisorption sites would be very attractive for the efficient emission of single photons with narrow lines and for the generation of indistinguishable photons.
Supplementary materials
Title
Charge Transfer-Induced Weakening of Vibronic Coupling for Single Terrylene Molecules Adsorbed onto hBN
Description
Brief summary of vibronic coupling theory; experimental and computational details; additional results of quantum chemical calculations (PDF).
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