Experimental data are presented showing that recombination of free carriers occurs in the bulk of mm size samples of PDA-TS single crystals under steady-state excitation. The results, combined with the shape of the photocurrent i dependence on field strength, E , lead to the following conclusions: 1) the quantum yield of free carriers cp does not depend on the field strength at E < lo3 Vlcm but increases at higher E; 2) cp depends also on the diffusion length L of free carriers before recombination in the bulk of the crystal: cp -L -l . The latter accounts for the unusual type of i dependence on I, i -1"' where rn varies with the intensity of the light I in the range 1 2 rn 2 2/3. The properties of geminate diffusive pairs of charges of opposite signs are responsible for the photogeneration of free carriers.These pairs are as large as L = cm which is much higher than Onsager's radius r,. The diffusive pairs are responsible also for the magnetic field effect on the photocurrent observed.
Experimental data are presented which give evidence about the short free path before recombination of free charge carriers in single crystals of polydiacetylene-toluene-sulphonate (PDA TS). The free path is shown to be much shorter than the millimetre-size electrode spacing. The recombination of carriers occurs via traps (of Shockly-Read type) or, at higher intensities, bimolecularly. The results obtained do not allow the authors to consider as substantiated the literature data on high (up to 105 cm2 V-1 s-1) mobility of carriers in PDA TS, and on the validity of one-dimensional diffusive theory of charge-pair separation as applied to PDA TS. All these data critically depend on the assumption of the absence of recombination.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.