Begin of page section:
Page sections:

  • Go to contents (Accesskey 1)
  • Go to position marker (Accesskey 2)
  • Go to main navigation (Accesskey 3)
  • Go to sub navigation (Accesskey 4)
  • Go to additional information (Accesskey 5)
  • Go to page settings (user/language) (Accesskey 8)
  • Go to search (Accesskey 9)

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:
Page settings:

English en
Deutsch de
Search
Login

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:
Search:

Search for details about Uni Graz
Close

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections


Search

Begin of page section:
Main navigation:

Page navigation:

  • University

    University
    • About the University
    • Organisation
    • Faculties
    • Library
    • Working at University of Graz
    • Campus
    Developing solutions for the world of tomorrow - that is our mission. Our students and our researchers take on the great challenges of society and carry the knowledge out.
  • Research Profile

    Research Profile
    • Our Expertise
    • Research Questions
    • Research Portal
    • Promoting Research
    • Research Transfer
    • Ethics in Research
    Scientific excellence and the courage to break new ground. Research at the University of Graz creates the foundations for making the future worth living.
  • Studies

    Studies
    • Prospective Students
    • Registration for Study Programme (Winter semester 2024/25)
    • Students
  • Community

    Community
    • International
    • Location
    • Research and Business
    • Alumni
    The University of Graz is a hub for international research and brings together scientists and business experts. Moreover, it fosters the exchange and cooperation in study and teaching.
  • Spotlight
Topics
  • StudiGPT is here! Try it out!
  • Sustainable University
  • Researchers answer
  • Work for us
Close menu

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:
You are here:

University of Graz Theoretical Solid State Physics News Quantum research: Images provide a better understanding of light and matter
  • Solid State Physics
  • Electronic structure of nanomaterials
  • Theoretical Nanophysics
  • Nano and quantum optics
  • Team Solid State Theory
  • Institute of Physics

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Tuesday, 19 March 2024

Quantum research: Images provide a better understanding of light and matter

Scientist-Team of the University of Graz ©Uni Graz/Tzivanopoulos

Scientist-Team of the University of Graz: Andreas Windischbacher, Christian Kern und Peter Puschnig. Foto: Uni Graz/Tzivanopoulos

An international team of researchers has been able to take photos of a special specimen from the world of quantum research for the first time: the exciton. The findings are to be used to generate even more electricity from sunlight using innovative photovoltaic systems.

It is common and yet one of the most important physical reactions from the world of quantum research: light meets matter and this leads to a wide variety of phenomena; people risk sunburn, black surfaces become hot and electricity is generated in photovoltaic systems. But what is behind it all? When a particle of light, a photon, hits an electron in a molecule, it throws the electron out of its orbit. Experts say that the electron is excited and reaches a higher level. In doing so, it leaves behind an empty space, an electron hole, to which it remains quantum mechanically connected. The result is a quasi-particle called an “exciton”.

But what properties do these quasi-particles have, what are they capable of, and what do they look like? Clarifying these questions has long been a major challenge. Researchers from the Universities of Göttingen, Graz, Kaiserslautern-Landau and Grenoble-Alpes have now achieved a decisive breakthrough. They were able to capture several images of such excitons. A remarkable achievement considering the rapid change and the tiny size. We are talking about 0.000000000000001 seconds and a length of 0.000000001 metres. The groundbreaking results were published in the journal Nature Communications.

Wiebke Bennecke, physicist at the University of Göttingen and first author of the study, explains: “We record the changes with extraordinarily precise spatial and temporal resolution and relate them to the theoretical predictions of quantum mechanics.” The researchers refer to this new method as photoemission exciton tomography.

Complex images

This technology enables the scientists to measure and visualise the quantum mechanical wave function of the excitons. The team at the University of Graz makes a significant contribution to the evaluation of the data by providing the theoretical models for the analysis. “The setup in Göttingen is unique and can take these complex images. We can then explain what you see on them,” says Peter Puschnig, head of the research team at the University of Graz.

Göttingen physicist Dr Matthijs Jansen explains the significance of the findings: “We have investigated organic carbon-based semiconductors, which are used in special photovoltaic systems or in the OLED screens of smartphones, for example.” The images illustrate how the exciton quickly spreads across several molecules and shrinks again within a few femtoseconds (one millionth of a billionth of a second).

Puschnig emphasises: “The results confirm the theoretical model we are working on at the University of Graz.” This can be helpful, for example, in the development of new photovoltaic technology on an organic basis. “We now have a more profound understanding of how the process of generating electricity with such systems works.” The vision behind the research: using new technologies to generate more electricity from sunlight.

Next step: Videos

These new photos of the excitons are by no means the end of the research, but rather the beginning of further intensive analyses. The next step is to record videos of the quasi-particles, says Göttingen researcher Jansen: “We hope that this knowledge will contribute to the development of more efficient materials for solar cells.”

The team in Graz is now also focussing on the further development of the underlying theory. The researchers received funding for this from the EU ERC grants under the title “Orbital Cinema”.

This research was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) as part of the Collaborative Research Centres “Atomic Control of Energy Conversion” and “Mathematics of Experimentation” in Göttingen and “Spin+X” in Kaiserslautern-Landau.

Publication
Bennecke, W. et al, Disentangling the multiorbital contributions of excitons by photoemission exciton tomography. Nature Communications (2024).

 

created by Roman Vilgut

Related news

Bend as you please

Geometry is key to the optical properties of plasmonic nanoparticles. Except when it isn’t.

iSCAT for all

Scientists from Graz and Wien develop simulation software for interferometric scattering microscopy

Mie in a cylinder

Special functions beat ray-tracing: a problem in optics that can be (just barely) solved analytically

Smallest Kandinsky in the world

Begin of page section:
Additional information:

University of Graz
Universitaetsplatz 3
8010 Graz
Austria
  • Contact
  • Web Editors
  • Moodle
  • UNIGRAZonline
  • Imprint
  • Data Protection Declaration
  • Accessibility Declaration
Weatherstation
Uni Graz

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections