7 research outputs found

    Emissive brightening in molecular graphene nanoribbons by twilight states

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    Carbon nanomaterials are expected to be bright and efficient emitters, but structural disorder, intermolecular interactions and the intrinsic presence of dark states suppress their photoluminescence. Here, we study synthetically-made graphene nanoribbons with atomically precise edges and which are designed to suppress intermolecular interactions to demonstrate strong photoluminescence in both solutions and thin films. The resulting high spectral resolution reveals strong vibron-electron coupling from the radial-breathing-like mode of the ribbons. In addition, their cove-edge structure produces inter-valley mixing, which brightens conventionally-dark states to generate hitherto-unrecognised twilight states as predicted by theory. The coupling of these states to the nanoribbon phonon modes affects absorption and emission differently, suggesting a complex interaction with both Herzberg–Teller and Franck– Condon coupling present. Detailed understanding of the fundamental electronic processes governing the optical response will help the tailored chemical design of nanocarbon optical devices, via gap tuning and side-chain functionalisation

    Machine learning discovery of cost-efficient dry cooler designs for concentrated solar power plants

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    Concentrated solar power (CSP) is one of the few sustainable energy technologies that offers day-to-night energy storage. Recent development of the supercritical carbon dioxide (sCO2) Brayton cycle has made CSP a potentially cost-competitive energy source. However, as CSP plants are most efficient in desert regions, where there is high solar irradiance and low land cost, careful design of a dry cooling system is crucial to make CSP practical. In this work, we present a machine learning system to optimize the factory design and configuration of a dry cooling system for an sCO2 Brayton cycle CSP plant. For this, we develop a physics-based simulation of the cooling properties of an air-cooled heat exchanger. The simulator is able to construct a dry cooling system satisfying a wide variety of power cycle requirements (e.g., 10–100 MW) for any surface air temperature. Using this simulator, we leverage recent results in high-dimensional Bayesian optimization to optimize dry cooler designs that minimize lifetime cost for a given location, reducing this cost by 67% compared to recently proposed designs. Our simulation and optimization framework can increase the development pace of economically-viable sustainable energy generation systems

    Direct observation of phase transitions between delta- and alpha-phase FAPbI 3 via defocused Raman spectroscopy

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    The ability to characterise perovskite phases non-destructively is key on the route to ensuring their long-term stability in operando. Raman spectroscopy holds the promise to play an important role in this task. Among all perovskites, formamidinium lead iodide (FAPbI3) has emerged as one of the most promising candidates for single-junction photovoltaic cells. However, Raman spectroscopy of FAPbI3 remains challenging as is evidenced by conflicting reports in the literature. Here, we demonstrate that due to the vulnerability of FAPbI3 to laser-induced degradation, the detected Raman spectrum depends strongly on the experimental conditions. This can lead to conflicting results and is revealed as the origin of discrepancies in the literature. We overcome this issue by deploying defocused Raman spectroscopy, preventing laser-induced damage to the sample and simultaneously improving the signal-to-noise ratio, allowing us to furthermore resolve much weaker Raman modes than was previously possible. We offer step-by-step instructions on how to apply this technique to a given spectrometer. Non-destructive characterisation of the FAPbI3 phases further enables us to quantify the phase stability of pristine FAPbI3 crystals and FAPbI3 grown with the high-performance additive methylenediammonium chloride (MDACl2). This shows that the neat crystals fully degrade within two weeks, whereas in samples grown with the additive only about 2% of the crystal bulk is in the δ-phase after 400 days. This establishes defocused Raman spectroscopy as a powerful tool for the characterisation of FAPbI3 and other perovskite materials

    Understanding the degradation of methylenediammonium and its role in phase-stabilizing formamidinium lead triiodide

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    Formamidinium lead triiodide (FAPbI3) is the leading candidate for single-junction metal–halide perovskite photovoltaics, despite the metastability of this phase. To enhance its ambient-phase stability and produce world-record photovoltaic efficiencies, methylenediammonium dichloride (MDACl2) has been used as an additive in FAPbI3. MDA2+ has been reported as incorporated into the perovskite lattice alongside Cl–. However, the precise function and role of MDA2+ remain uncertain. Here, we grow FAPbI3 single crystals from a solution containing MDACl2 (FAPbI3-M). We demonstrate that FAPbI3-M crystals are stable against transformation to the photoinactive δ-phase for more than one year under ambient conditions. Critically, we reveal that MDA2+ is not the direct cause of the enhanced material stability. Instead, MDA2+ degrades rapidly to produce ammonium and methaniminium, which subsequently oligomerizes to yield hexamethylenetetramine (HMTA). FAPbI3 crystals grown from a solution containing HMTA (FAPbI3-H) replicate the enhanced α-phase stability of FAPbI3-M. However, we further determine that HMTA is unstable in the perovskite precursor solution, where reaction with FA+ is possible, leading instead to the formation of tetrahydrotriazinium (THTZ-H+). By a combination of liquid- and solid-state NMR techniques, we show that THTZ-H+ is selectively incorporated into the bulk of both FAPbI3-M and FAPbI3-H at ∼0.5 mol % and infer that this addition is responsible for the improved α-phase stability

    Direct observation of phase transitions between delta- and alpha-phase FAPbI<sub>3</sub><i>via</i> defocused Raman spectroscopy

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    Defocused Raman spectroscopy is used to assess the phase stability of semiconducting perovskites, preventing laser-induced damage and simultaneously improving the signal-to-noise ratio

    Improving performance of fully scalable, flexible transparent conductive films made from carbon nanotubes and ethylene-vinyl acetate

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    We report process improvements for the fabrication of single-walled carbon nanotube ethylene-vinyl acetate transparent conductive films. CNT:EVA films demonstrate high resilience against folding and can replace the external dopant in a spiro-OMeTAD based hole selective contact of n-i-p perovskite solar cells achieving a steady-state efficiency of 16.3%. The adapted process is fully scalable, and compared to previous reports (Mazzotta et al., 2018) lowers the material cost dramatically and improves DC to optical conductivity ratio by two orders of magnitude to σdc/σop = 3.6 for pristine and σdc/σop = 15 for chemically doped films. We analyse the microstructure of our films via small angle neutron scattering and find a positive correlation between the long range packing density of the CNT:EVA films and the σdc/σop performance. Increasing monomer ratio and chain length of the EVA polymer improves resilience against bending strain, whereas no significant effect on the CNT wrapping and electrical conductivity of resulting films is found

    Understanding the Degradation of Methylenediammonium and Its Role in Phase-Stabilizing Formamidinium Lead Triiodide

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    Formamidinium lead triiodide (FAPbI3) is the leading candidate for single-junction metal–halide perovskite photovoltaics, despite the metastability of this phase. To enhance its ambient-phase stability and produce world-record photovoltaic efficiencies, methylenediammonium dichloride (MDACl2) has been used as an additive in FAPbI3. MDA2+ has been reported as incorporated into the perovskite lattice alongside Cl–. However, the precise function and role of MDA2+ remain uncertain. Here, we grow FAPbI3 single crystals from a solution containing MDACl2 (FAPbI3-M). We demonstrate that FAPbI3-M crystals are stable against transformation to the photoinactive δ-phase for more than one year under ambient conditions. Critically, we reveal that MDA2+ is not the direct cause of the enhanced material stability. Instead, MDA2+ degrades rapidly to produce ammonium and methaniminium, which subsequently oligomerizes to yield hexamethylenetetramine (HMTA). FAPbI3 crystals grown from a solution containing HMTA (FAPbI3-H) replicate the enhanced α-phase stability of FAPbI3-M. However, we further determine that HMTA is unstable in the perovskite precursor solution, where reaction with FA+ is possible, leading instead to the formation of tetrahydrotriazinium (THTZ-H+). By a combination of liquid- and solid-state NMR techniques, we show that THTZ-H+ is selectively incorporated into the bulk of both FAPbI3-M and FAPbI3-H at ∼0.5 mol % and infer that this addition is responsible for the improved α-phase stability
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