82 research outputs found
Effects of Cd Diffusion and Doping in High-Performance Perovskite Solar Cells Using CdS as Electron Transport Layer
Perovskite
solar cells with stabilized power conversion efficiency
exceeding 15% have been achieved, using a methylammonium lead iodide
(MAPbI<sub>3</sub>) absorber and CdS as the electron transport layer.
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy reveals a small presence of Cd at the surface of most
perovskite films fabricated on CdS. Perovskite films were deliberately
doped with Cd to understand the possible impacts of Cd diffusion into
the perovskite absorber layer. Doping substantially increases the
grain size of the perovskite films but also reduces device performance
through the formation of an electrical barrier, as inferred by the
S-shape of their <i>J</i>ā<i>V</i> curves.
Time-resolved photoluminescence measurements of the doped films do
not indicate substantial nonradiative recombination due to bulk defects,
but a secondary phase is evident in these films, which experiments
have revealed to be the organicāinorganic hybrid material methylammonium
cadmium iodide, (CH<sub>3</sub>NH<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>CdI<sub>4</sub>. It is further demonstrated that this compound can form via
the reaction of CdS with methylammonium iodide and may form as a competing
phase during deposition of the perovskite. Buildup of this insulating
compound may act as an electrical barrier at perovskite interfaces,
accounting for the drop in device performance
Examining the Effects of Homochirality for Electron Transfer in Protein Assemblies
Protein voltammetry
studies of cytochrome c, immobilized
on chiral tripeptide monolayer films, reveal the importance of the
electron spin and the filmās homochirality on electron transfer
kinetics. Magnetic film electrodes are used to examine how an asymmetry
in the standard heterogeneous electron transfer rate constant arises
from changes in the electron spin direction and the enantiomer composition
of the tripeptide monolayer; rate constant asymmetries as large as
60% are observed. These findings are rationalized in terms of the
chiral induced spin selectivity effect and spin-dependent changes
in electronic coupling. Lastly, marked differences in the average
rate constant are shown between homochiral ensembles, in which the
peptide and protein possess the same enantiomeric form, compared to
heterochiral ensembles, where the handedness of the peptide layer
is opposite to that of the protein or itself comprises heterochiral
building blocks. These data demonstrate a compelling rationale for
why nature is homochiral; namely, spin alignment in homochiral systems
enables more efficient energy transduction
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