An exciton is a bound state of an electron and an imaginary particle called an electron hole in an insulator or semiconductor, and such is a Coulomb correlated electron-hole pair. It is an elementary excitation, or a quasiparticle of a solid.
A vivid picture of exciton formation is as follows: a photon enters a semiconductor, exciting an electron from the valence band into the conduction band. The missing electron in the valence band leaves a hole behind, of opposite electric charge, to which it is attracted by the Coulomb force. The exciton results from the binding of the electron with its hole; as a result, the exciton has slightly less energy than the unbound electron and hole. The wavefunction of the bound state is hydrogenic (an "exotic atom" state akin to that of a hydrogen atom). However, the binding energy is much smaller and the size much bigger than a hydrogen atom because of the effects of screening and the effective mass of the constituents in the material.
In a hydrogen atom the core and the electron can have parallel or antiparallel spin, the same is true for the exciton and for the positronium, but not for the two electrons in the He-atom. Often excitons were given names which look like hydrogen orbital names, but have the wrong numbering for angular momentum, or other quantum numbers.
When a material's dieletric constant is very small, the Coulomb interaction between electron and hole become very strong and the excitons tend to be much smaller, of the same order as the unit cell, so the electron and hole sit on the same cell. This is a Frenkel exciton, named after J. Frenkel.
Alternatively, an exciton may be thought of as an excited state of an atom or ion, the excitation wandering from one cell of the lattice to another.
Often there are more than one band to choose from for the electron and the hole leading to different types of excitons in the same material. Even high lying bands can be used as is seen in femtosecond two-photon experiments.
At surfaces so called image states may occur, where the hole is inside the solid and the electron is in the vacuum. These electron hole pairs can only move along the surface.
The whole exciton can move through the solid. With this additional kinetic energy the exciton may lie above the band-gap.
The existence of exciton states may be inferred from the absorption of light associated with their excitation. Typically, excitons are observed just below the band gap.
Additionally, excitons are integer-spin particles obeying Bose statistics in the low-density limit. In some systems, where the interactions are repulsive, a Bose-Einstein condensed state is predicted to be the ground state, but has yet to be observed due to the influence of factors such as material disorder, short exciton lifetimes (less than the re-thermalization times) and low exciton densities.
إيكسيتون | Exziton | Exciton | Eccitone | Exciton | 励起子 | Ekscyton | Экситон