2 research outputs found
Solubilization of Carbon Nanotubes with Ethylene-Vinyl Acetate for Solution-Processed Conductive Films and Charge Extraction Layers in Perovskite Solar Cells
Carbon nanotube (CNT) solubilization
via non-covalent wrapping of conjugated semiconducting polymers is
a common technique used to produce stable dispersions for depositing
CNTs from solution. Here, we report the use of a non-conjugated insulating
polymer, ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA), to disperse multi- and single-walled
CNTs (MWCNT and SWCNT) in organic solvents. We demonstrate that despite
the insulating nature of the EVA, we can produce semitransparent films
with conductivities of up to 34 S/cm. We show, using photoluminescence
spectroscopy, that the EVA strongly binds to individual CNTs, thus
making them soluble, preventing aggregation, and facilitating the
deposition of high-quality films. To prove the good electronic properties
of this composite, we have fabricated perovskite solar cells using
EVA/SWCNTs and EVA/MWCNTs as selective hole contact, obtaining power
conversion efficiencies of up to 17.1%, demonstrating that the insulating
polymer does not prevent the charge transfer from the active material
to the CNTs
Filamentary High-Resolution Electrical Probes for Nanoengineering
Confining electric fields to a nanoscale
region is challenging
yet crucial for applications such as high-resolution probing of electrical
properties of materials and electric-field manipulation of nanoparticles.
State-of-the-art techniques involving atomic force microscopy typically
have a lateral resolution limit of tens of nanometers due to limitations
in the probe geometry and stray electric fields that extend over space.
Engineering the probes is the most direct approach to improving this
resolution limit. However, current methods to fabricate high-resolution
probes, which can effectively confine the electric fields laterally,
involve expensive and sophisticated probe manipulation, which has
limited the use of this approach. Here, we demonstrate that nanoscale
phase switching of configurable thin films on probes can result in
high-resolution electrical probes. These configurable coatings can
be both germanium–antimony–tellurium (GST) as well as
amorphous-carbon, materials known to undergo electric field-induced
nonvolatile, yet reversible switching. By forming a localized conductive
filament through phase transition, we demonstrate a spatial resolution
of electrical field beyond the geometrical limitations of commercial
platinum probes (i.e., an improvement of ∼48%). We then utilize
these confined electric fields to manipulate nanoparticles with single
nanoparticle precision via dielectrophoresis. Our results advance
the field of nanomanufacturing and metrology with direct applications
for pick and place assembly at the nanoscale
