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    Gradient-Doped Colloidal Quantum Dot Solids Enable Thermophotovoltaic Harvesting of Waste Heat

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    Electromagnetic radiation emitted from hot objects represents a sizable source of energy, one that in most applications is not harvested efficiently. Even for a blackbody at 800 °C, the radiation intensity peaks near 2.7 μm wavelength, and this requires a semiconductor absorber having a band gap in the short-wavelength infrared and beyond to enable thermophotovoltaic (TPV) heat recovery. Here we report the first solution-processed TPV device to harvest efficiently 800 °C heat. The active layer consists of colloidal quantum dots (CQDs), infrared-absorbing nanoparticles synthesized using a scalable solution-based method, having 0.75 eV band gap. We construct rectifying junction devices based on controllably p- and n-doped CQD solids that benefit from a gradient in electron affinity that extends over the devices’ thickness. The gradient-doped architecture relies on engineered charge carrier drift and overcomes the existing limitations of small band gap CQD solids. The devices provide 2.7% efficiency in the conversion of optical power from above-band gap photons from a blackbody source at 800 ± 20 °C into electrical power. The cells were thermally stable up to 140 °C, increasing the promise of CQD solids for TPV applications
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