519 research outputs found
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Manipulating nanoscale structure to control functionality in printed organic photovoltaic, transistor and bioelectronic devices.
Printed electronics is simultaneously one of the most intensely studied emerging research areas in science and technology and one of the fastest growing commercial markets in the world today. For the past decade the potential for organic electronic (OE) materials to revolutionize this printed electronics space has been widely promoted. Such conviction in the potential of these carbon-based semiconducting materials arises from their ability to be dissolved in solution, and thus the exciting possibility of simply printing a range of multifunctional devices onto flexible substrates at high speeds for very low cost using standard roll-to-roll printing techniques. However, the transition from promising laboratory innovations to large scale prototypes requires precise control of nanoscale material and device structure across large areas during printing fabrication. Maintaining this nanoscale material control during printing presents a significant new challenge that demands the coupling of OE materials and devices with clever nanoscience fabrication approaches that are adapted to the limited thermodynamic levers available. In this review we present an update on the strategies and capabilities that are required in order to manipulate the nanoscale structure of large area printed organic photovoltaic (OPV), transistor and bioelectronics devices in order to control their device functionality. This discussion covers a range of efforts to manipulate the electroactive ink materials and their nanostructured assembly into devices, and also device processing strategies to tune the nanoscale material properties and assembly routes through printing fabrication. The review finishes by highlighting progress in printed OE devices that provide a feedback loop between laboratory nanoscience innovations and their feasibility in adapting to large scale printing fabrication. The ability to control material properties on the nanoscale whilst simultaneously printing functional devices on the square metre scale is prompting innovative developments in the targeted nanoscience required for OPV, transistor and biofunctional devices
Single crystalline thin films as a novel class of electrocatalysts
The ubiquitous use of single crystal metal electrodes has garnered invaluable
insight into the relationship between surface atomic structure and functional
electrochemical properties. However, the sensitivity of their electrochemical
response to surface orientation and the amount of precious metal required can
limit their use. We present here a generally applicable procedure for
producing thin metal films with a large proportion of atomically flat (111)
terraces without the use of an epitaxial template. Thermal annealing in a
controlled atmosphere induces long-range ordering of magnetron sputtered thin
metal films deposited on an amorphous substrate. The ordering transition in
these thin metal films yields characteristic (111) electrochemical signatures
with minimal amount of material and provides an adequate replacement for
oriented bulk single crystals. This procedure can be generalized towards a
novel class of practical multimetallic thin film based electrocatalysts with
tunable near-surface compositional profile and morphology. Annealing of
atomically corrugated sputtered thin film Pt-alloy catalysts yields an
atomically smooth structure with highly crystalline, (111)-like ordered and
Pt segregated surface that displays superior functional properties, bridging
the gap between extended/bulk surfaces and nanoscale systems
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Catalytic materials for energy conversion and storage: From theory to product
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Manipulating nanoscale structure to control functionality in printed organic photovoltaic, transistor and bioelectronic devices.
Printed electronics is simultaneously one of the most intensely studied emerging research areas in science and technology and one of the fastest growing commercial markets in the world today. For the past decade the potential for organic electronic (OE) materials to revolutionize this printed electronics space has been widely promoted. Such conviction in the potential of these carbon-based semiconducting materials arises from their ability to be dissolved in solution, and thus the exciting possibility of simply printing a range of multifunctional devices onto flexible substrates at high speeds for very low cost using standard roll-to-roll printing techniques. However, the transition from promising laboratory innovations to large scale prototypes requires precise control of nanoscale material and device structure across large areas during printing fabrication. Maintaining this nanoscale material control during printing presents a significant new challenge that demands the coupling of OE materials and devices with clever nanoscience fabrication approaches that are adapted to the limited thermodynamic levers available. In this review we present an update on the strategies and capabilities that are required in order to manipulate the nanoscale structure of large area printed organic photovoltaic (OPV), transistor and bioelectronics devices in order to control their device functionality. This discussion covers a range of efforts to manipulate the electroactive ink materials and their nanostructured assembly into devices, and also device processing strategies to tune the nanoscale material properties and assembly routes through printing fabrication. The review finishes by highlighting progress in printed OE devices that provide a feedback loop between laboratory nanoscience innovations and their feasibility in adapting to large scale printing fabrication. The ability to control material properties on the nanoscale whilst simultaneously printing functional devices on the square metre scale is prompting innovative developments in the targeted nanoscience required for OPV, transistor and biofunctional devices
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Design of highly active and durable electrocatalysts by tuning nanostructure
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Design of highly active and durable electrocatalysts by tuning nanostructure
Multimetallic Core/Interlayer/Shell Nanostructures as Advanced Electrocatalysts
The fine balance between activity
and durability is crucial for
the development of high performance electrocatalysts. The importance
of atomic structure and compositional gradients is a guiding principle
in exploiting the knowledge from well-defined materials in the design
of novel class of core–shell electrocatalysts comprising Ni
core, Au interlayer, and PtNi shell (Ni@Au@PtNi). This multimetallic
system is found to have the optimal balance of activity and durability
due to the synergy between the stabilizing effect of subsurface Au
and modified electronic structure of surface Pt through interaction
with subsurface Ni atoms. The electrocatalysts with Ni@Au@PtNi core-interlayer-shell
structure exhibit high intrinsic and mass activities as well as superior
durability for the oxygen reduction reaction with less than 10% activity
loss after 10 000 potential cycles between 0.6 and 1.1 V vs
the reversible hydrogen electrode
Balancing activity, stability and conductivity of nanoporous core-shell iridium/iridium oxide oxygen evolution catalysts
Production of affordable, clean hydrogen relies on efficient oxygen evolution, but improving catalytic performance for the reaction in acidic media is challenging. Here the authors show how tuning the nanoporous morphology of iridium/iridium oxide leads to an improvement in activity/stability, compared with conventional iridium-based oxides
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Balancing activity, stability and conductivity of nanoporous core-shell iridium/iridium oxide oxygen evolution catalysts.
The selection of oxide materials for catalyzing the oxygen evolution reaction in acid-based electrolyzers must be guided by the proper balance between activity, stability and conductivity-a challenging mission of great importance for delivering affordable and environmentally friendly hydrogen. Here we report that the highly conductive nanoporous architecture of an iridium oxide shell on a metallic iridium core, formed through the fast dealloying of osmium from an Ir25Os75 alloy, exhibits an exceptional balance between oxygen evolution activity and stability as quantified by the activity-stability factor. On the basis of this metric, the nanoporous Ir/IrO2 morphology of dealloyed Ir25Os75 shows a factor of ~30 improvement in activity-stability factor relative to conventional iridium-based oxide materials, and an ~8 times improvement over dealloyed Ir25Os75 nanoparticles due to optimized stability and conductivity, respectively. We propose that the activity-stability factor is a key "metric" for determining the technological relevance of oxide-based anodic water electrolyzer catalysts
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