18 research outputs found
Experimental quantification of useful and parasitic absorption of light in plasmon-enhanced thin silicon films for solar cells application
A combination of photocurrent and photothermal spectroscopic techniques is applied to experimentally quantify the useful and parasitic absorption of light in thin hydrogenated microcrystalline silicon (ÎĽc-Si:H) films incorporating optimized metal nanoparticle arrays, located at the rear surface, for improved light trapping via resonant plasmonic scattering. The photothermal technique accounts for the total absorptance and the photocurrent signal accounts only for the photons absorbed in the ÎĽc-Si:H layer (useful absorptance); therefore, the method allows for independent quantification of the useful and parasitic absorptance of the plasmonic (or any other) light trapping structure. We demonstrate that with a 0.9 ÎĽm thick absorber layer the optical losses related to the plasmonic light trapping in the whole structure are insignificant below 730 nm, above which they increase rapidly with increasing illumination wavelength. An average useful absorption of 43% and an average parasitic absorption of 19% over 400-1100 nm wavelength range is measured for ÎĽc-Si:H films deposited on optimized self-assembled Ag nanoparticles coupled with a flat mirror (plasmonic back reflector). For this sample, we demonstrate a significant broadband enhancement of the useful absorption resulting in the achievement of 91% of the maximum theoretical Lambertian limit of absorption
Impact of AFM-induced nano-pits in a-Si:H films on silicon crystal growth
Conductive tips in atomic force microscopy (AFM) can be used to localize field-enhanced metal-induced solid-phase crystallization (FE-MISPC) of amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) at room temperature down to nanoscale dimensions. In this article, the authors show that such local modifications can be used to selectively induce further localized growth of silicon nanocrystals. First, a-Si:H films by plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition on nickel/glass substrates are prepared. After the FE-MISPC process, yielding both conductive and non-conductive nano-pits in the films, the second silicon layer at the boundary condition of amorphous and microcrystalline growth is deposited. Comparing AFM morphology and current-sensing AFM data on the first and second layers, it is observed that the second deposition changes the morphology and increases the local conductivity of FE-MISPC-induced pits by up to an order of magnitude irrespective of their prior conductivity. This is attributed to the silicon nanocrystals (<100 nm) that tend to nucleate and grow inside the pits. This is also supported by micro-Raman spectroscopy
Synthesis, structure, and opto-electronic properties of organic-based nanoscale heterojunctions
Enormous research effort has been put into optimizing organic-based opto-electronic systems for efficient generation of free charge carriers. This optimization is mainly due to typically high dissociation energy (0.1-1 eV) and short diffusion length (10 nm) of excitons in organic materials. Inherently, interplay of microscopic structural, chemical, and opto-electronic properties plays crucial role. We show that employing and combining advanced scanning probe techniques can provide us significant insight into the correlation of these properties. By adjusting parameters of contact- and tapping-mode atomic force microscopy (AFM), we perform morphologic and mechanical characterizations (nanoshaving) of organic layers, measure their electrical conductivity by current-sensing AFM, and deduce work functions and surface photovoltage (SPV) effects by Kelvin force microscopy using high spatial resolution. These data are further correlated with local material composition detected using micro-Raman spectroscopy and with other electronic transport data. We demonstrate benefits of this multi-dimensional characterizations on (i) bulk heterojunction of fully organic composite films, indicating differences in blend quality and component segregation leading to local shunts of photovoltaic cell, and (ii) thin-film heterojunction of polypyrrole (PPy) electropolymerized on hydrogen-terminated diamond, indicating covalent bonding and transfer of charge carriers from PPy to diamond
Guided assembly of nanoparticles on electrostatically charged nanocrystalline diamond thin films
We apply atomic force microscope for local electrostatic charging of oxygen-terminated nanocrystalline diamond (NCD) thin films deposited on silicon, to induce electrostatically driven self-assembly of colloidal alumina nanoparticles into micro-patterns. Considering possible capacitive, sp2 phase and spatial uniformity factors to charging, we employ films with sub-100 nm thickness and about 60% relative sp2 phase content, probe the spatial material uniformity by Raman and electron microscopy, and repeat experiments at various positions. We demonstrate that electrostatic potential contrast on the NCD films varies between 0.1 and 1.2 V and that the contrast of more than ±1 V (as detected by Kelvin force microscopy) is able to induce self-assembly of the nanoparticles via coulombic and polarization forces. This opens prospects for applications of diamond and its unique set of properties in self-assembly of nano-devices and nano-systems
Effective Extraction of Photoluminescence from a Diamond Layer with a Photonic Crystal
Diamond-based materials possess many unique properties, one of them being a broad-band visible photoluminescence due to a variety of color centers. However, a high material refractive index makes the extraction of photoluminescence (PL) from a diamond layer inefficient. In this paper, we show that by periodical nanopatterning of the film's surface into a form of two-dimensional photonic crystal, the extraction of PL can be strongly enhanced within the whole visible spectrum compared to the extraction of PL in a pristine or randomly nanopatterned film. On the basis of theoretical calculations, enhancement is shown to be due to the photonic crystal effect, including efficient coupling of an excitation laser into the diamon
Linking crystal structure with temperature-sensitive vibrational modes in calcium carbonate minerals
Effective Extraction of Photoluminescence from a Diamond Layer with a Photonic Crystal
Diamond-based materials possess many unique properties, one of them being a broad-band visible photoluminescence due to a variety of color centers. However, a high material refractive index makes the extraction of photoluminescence (PL) from a diamond layer inefficient. In this paper, we show that by periodical nanopatterning of the film's surface into a form of two-dimensional photonic crystal, the extraction of PL can be strongly enhanced within the whole visible spectrum compared to the extraction of PL in a pristine or randomly nanopatterned film. On the basis of theoretical calculations, enhancement is shown to be due to the photonic crystal effect, including efficient coupling of an excitation laser into the diamon