3 research outputs found
SYNTHESIS OF TITANIA THIN FILMS WITH CONTROLLED MESOPORE ORIENTATION: NANOSTRUCTURE FOR ENERGY CONVERSION AND STORAGE
This dissertation addresses the synthesis mechanism of mesoporous titania thin films with 2D Hexagonal Close Packed (HCP) cylindrical nanopores by an evaporation-induced self-assembly (EISA) method with Pluronic surfactants P123 and F127 as structure directing agents, and their applications in photovoltaics and lithium ion batteries. To provide orthogonal alignment of the pores, surface modification of substrates with crosslinked surfactant has been used to provide a chemically neutral surface. GISAXS studies show not only that aging at 4°C facilitates ordered mesostructure development, but also that aging at this temperature helps to provide orthogonal orientation of the cylindrical micelles which assemble into an ordered mesophase directly by a disorder-order transition. These films provide pores with 8-9 nm diameter, which is precisely the structure expected to provide short carrier diffusion length and high hole conductivity required for efficient bulk heterojunction solar cells. In addition, anatase titania is a n-type semiconductor with a band gap of +3.2 eV. Therefore, titania readily absorbs UV light with a wavelength below 387 nm. Because of this, these titania films can be used as window layers with a p-type semiconductor incorporated into the pores and at the top surface of the device to synthesize a photovoltaic cell. The pores provide opportunities to increase the surface area for contact between the two semiconductors, to align a p-type semiconductor at the junction, and to induce quantum confinement effects.
These titania films with hexagonal phase are infiltrated with a hole conducting polymer, poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT), in order to create a p-n junctions for organic-inorganic hybrid solar cells, by spin coating followed by thermal annealing. This assembly is hypothesized to give better photovoltaic performance compared to disordered or bicontinuous cubic nanopore arrangements; confinement in cylindrical nanopores is expected to provide isolated, regioregular “wires” of conjugated polymers with tunable optoelectronic properties, such as improved hole conductivity over that in bicontinuous cubic structure. The kinetics of infiltration into the pores show that maximum infiltration occurs within less than one hour in these films, and give materials with improved photovoltaic performance relative to planar TiO2/P3HT assemblies. These oriented mesoporous titania films are also used to develop an inorganic solar cell by depositing CdTe at the top using the Close Spaced Sublimation (CSS) technique. A power conversion efficiency of 5.53% is measured for heterostructures built using mesoporous titania films, which is significantly enhanced relative to planar TiO2/CdTe devices and prior reports in the literature. These mesoporous titania films have a great potential in inorganic solar cell development and can potentially replace CdS window layers which are conventionally used in inorganic CdS-CdTe solar cells. The last part of the dissertation addresses layer-by-layer synthesis to increase the thickness of mesoporous titania films with vertically oriented 2D-HCP nanopores, and their use in lithium ion batteries as negative electrodes because of advantages such as good cycling stability, small volume expansion (~3%) during intercalation/extraction and high discharge voltage plateau. The high surface area and small wall thickness of these titania films provide excellent lithium ion insertion and reduced Li-ion diffusion length, resulting in stable capacities as high as 200-250 mAh/g over 200 cycles
Hemicyanine Dye as a Surfactant for the Synthesis of Bicontinuous Cubic Mesostructured Silica
In this paper, we developed a facile way to synthesize highly ordered optically active MCM-48 at room
temperature, by using mixtures of hemicyanine dye N-alkyl-2-[p-(N,N-diethylamino)-o-(alkyloxy)]pyridinium
bromide (denoted as o-CnPOCm, Scheme ) and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) as the structure-directing agents. The mesoporous materials were systematically characterized by powder X-ray diffraction,
transmission electron microscopy, nitrogen sorption, and thermogravimetry. The resultant MCM-48 exibits
unusually high thermal stability. For example, in the case of o-C2POC14, it can retain its cubic structure even
under calcinations at 900 °C for 5 h, although the pore size is shifted to the micropore region because of
shrinkage of the framework. The typical surface area and pore volume are 980 m2/g and 0.44 cm3/g, respectively,
for the powder calcined under such a high temperature. This is the first report of room-temperature synthesis
of MCM-48 with such good thermal stability using cationic−cationic mixed surfactant as the structure-directing
agent. The fluorescence lifetimes of the as-synthesized mesostructured MCM-48 were also measured, and
the result showed that the incorporated dye molecules have a 1 order of magnitude longer lifetime than that
of free species in solution, showing that the hemicyanine dye molecules are well dispersed within the CTAB
surfactant matrix. Furthermore, we compared eight other dye congeners (Scheme ) to fully investigate the
mesophase resulting from the dye−CTAB system. The results show that, upon addition of the dye surfactant
to the starting mixtures, the mesostructured silica undergoes an intrinsic phase-transition process; however,
specific dye geometry is required to obtain MCM-48 at room temperature. Those functionalities as well as
the designed synthesis of this novel mesostructured MCM-48 material promise a bright future in multifunctional
optical and electric nano- and microdevices (e.g., waveguides, laser, light-emitting diodes, etc.) and also shed
light on the self-assembly behavior in complex colloidal system
