31 research outputs found
Absence of Structural Impact of Noble Nanoparticles on P3HT: PCBM Blends for Plasmon Enhanced Bulk-Heterojunction Organic Solar Cells Probed by Synchrotron Grazing Incidence X-Ray Diffraction
The incorporation of noble metal nanoparticles, displaying localized surface
plasmon resonance, in the active area of donor-acceptor bulk-heterojunction
organic photovoltaic devices is an industrially compatible light trapping
strategy, able to guarantee better absorption of the incident photons and give
an efficiency improvement between 12% and 38%. In the present work, we
investigate the effect of Au and Ag nanoparticles blended with P3HT: PCBM on
the P3HT crystallization dynamics by synchrotron grazing incidence X-ray
diffraction. We conclude that the presence of (1) 80nm Au, (2) mix of 5nm,
50nm, 80nm Au, (3) 40nm Ag, and (4) 10nm, 40nm, 60nm Ag colloidal
nanoparticles, at different concentrations below 0.3 wt% in P3HT: PCBM blends,
does not affect the behaviour of the blends themselves
EFM data mapped into 2D images of tip-sample contact potential difference and capacitance second derivative
We report a simple technique for mapping Electrostatic Force Microscopy (EFM) bias sweep data into 2D images. The method allows simultaneous probing, in the same scanning area, of the contact potential difference and the second derivative of the capacitance between tip and sample, along with the height information. The only required equipment consists of a microscope with lift-mode EFM capable of phase shift detection. We designate this approach as Scanning Probe Potential Electrostatic Force Microscopy (SPP-EFM). An open-source MATLAB Graphical User Interface (GUI) for images acquisition, processing and analysis has been developed. The technique is tested with Indium Tin Oxide (ITO) and with poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) nanowires for organic transistor applications
Bimodal crystallization at polymer-fullerene interfaces
The growth-kinetics of [6,6]-phenyl C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM) crystals, on two different length-scales, is shown to be controlled by the thickness of the polymer layer within a PCBM-polymer bilayer. Using a model amorphous polymer we present evidence, from in situ optical microscopy and grazing-incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD), that an increased growth-rate of nanoscale crystals impedes the growth of micron-sized, needle-like PCBM crystals. A combination of neutron reflectivity and GIXD measurements, also allows us to observe the establishment of a liquid-liquid equilibrium composition-profile between the PCBM layer and a polymer-rich layer, before crystallization occurs. While the interfacial composition-profile is independent of polymer-film-thickness, the growth-rate of nanoscale PCBM crystals is significantly larger for thinner polymer films. A similar thickness-dependent behavior is observed for different molecular weights of entangled polymer. We suggest that the behavior may be related to enhanced local-polymer-chain-mobility in nanocomposite thin-films
Maximizing and stabilizing luminescence from halide perovskites with potassium passivation
Metal halide perovskites are of great interest for various high-performance optoelectronic applications. The ability to tune the perovskite bandgap continuously by modifying the chemical composition opens up applications for perovskites as coloured emitters, in building-integrated photovoltaics, and as components of tandem photovoltaics to increase the power conversion efficiency. Nevertheless, performance is limited by non-radiative losses, with luminescence yields in state-of-the-art perovskite solar cells still far from 100 per cent under standard solar illumination conditions. Furthermore, in mixed halide perovskite systems designed for continuous bandgap tunability2 (bandgaps of approximately 1.7 to 1.9 electronvolts), photoinduced ion segregation leads to bandgap instabilities. Here we demonstrate substantial mitigation of both non-radiative losses and photoinduced ion migration in perovskite films and interfaces by decorating the surfaces and grain boundaries with passivating potassium halide layers. We demonstrate external photoluminescence quantum yields of 66 per cent, which translate to internal yields that exceed 95 per cent. The high luminescence yields are achieved while maintaining high mobilities of more than 40 square centimetres per volt per second, providing the elusive combination of both high luminescence and excellent charge transport. When interfaced with electrodes in a solar cell device stack, the external luminescence yield—a quantity that must be maximized to obtain high efficiency—remains as high as 15 per cent, indicating very clean interfaces. We also demonstrate the inhibition of transient photoinduced ion-migration processes across a wide range of mixed halide perovskite bandgaps in materials that exhibit bandgap instabilities when unpassivated. We validate these results in fully operating solar cells. Our work represents an important advance in the construction of tunable metal halide perovskite films and interfaces that can approach the efficiency limits in tandem solar cells, coloured-light-emitting diodes and other optoelectronic applications.M.A.-J. thanks Nava Technology Limited and Nyak Technology Limited for their funding and technical support. Z.A.-G. acknowledges funding from a Winton Studentship, and ICON Studentship from the Lloyd’s Register Foundation. This project has received funding from the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under REA grant agreement number PIOF-GA-2013-622630, the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement number 756962), and the Royal Society and Tata Group (UF150033). We thank the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) for support. XMaS is a mid-range facility at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility supported by the EPSRC and we are grateful to the XMaS beamline team staff for their support. We thank Diamond Light Source for access to beamline I09 and staff member T.-L. Lee as well as U. Cappel for assistance during the HAXPES measurements. S.C., C.D. and G.D. acknowledge funding from the ERC under grant number 25961976 PHOTO EM and financial support from the European Union under grant number 77 312483 ESTEEM2. M.A. thanks the president of the UAE’s Distinguished Student Scholarship Program, granted by the Ministry of Presidential Affairs. H.R. and B.P. acknowledge support from the Swedish research council (2014-6019) and the Swedish foundation for strategic research. E.M.H. and T.J.S. were supported by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research under the Echo grant number 712.014.007
High-efficiency perovskite–polymer bulk heterostructure light-emitting diodes
Perovskite-based optoelectronic devices have gained significant attention due
to their remarkable performance and low processing cost, particularly for solar
cells. However, for perovskite light-emitting diodes (LEDs), non-radiative
charge carrier recombination has limited electroluminescence (EL) efficiency.
Here we demonstrate perovskite-polymer bulk heterostructure LEDs exhibiting
record-high external quantum efficiencies (EQEs) exceeding 20%, and an EL
half-life of 46 hours under continuous operation. This performance is achieved
with an emissive layer comprising quasi-2D and 3D perovskites and an insulating
polymer. Transient optical spectroscopy reveals that photogenerated excitations
at the quasi-2D perovskite component migrate to lower-energy sites within 1 ps.
The dominant component of the photoluminescence (PL) is primarily bimolecular
and is characteristic of the 3D regions. From PL quantum efficiency and
transient kinetics of the emissive layer with/without charge-transport
contacts, we find non-radiative recombination pathways to be effectively
eliminated. Light outcoupling from planar LEDs, as used in OLED displays,
generally limits EQE to 20-30%, and we model our reported EL efficiency of over
20% in the forward direction to indicate the internal quantum efficiency (IQE)
to be close to 100%. Together with the low drive voltages needed to achieve
useful photon fluxes (2-3 V for 0.1-1 mA/cm2), these results establish that
perovskite-based LEDs have significant potential for light-emission
applications
The influence of substrate and top electrode on the crystallization dynamics of P3HT: PCBM blends
Substrate and top electrode effects on P3HT lamellar crystallization, were studied using the full device structure of a bulk-hetorojunction P3HT:PCBM organic solar cell, during thermal annealing. P3HT: PCBM chlorobenzene solutions (50 wt %) were spin coated on quartz, HMDS treated SiO2, SiO2/PEDOT: PSS, ITO/PEDOT: PSS. The structural evolution of these thick (∼100nm) films was probed during a realistic device-processing annealing cycle at 140°C for ∼53 minutes by time-resolved synchrotron Grazing Incidence X-Ray Diffraction (GI-XRD). The 20 nm- thick coated Aluminium layer on top of ITO/PEDOT: PSS/P3HT: PCBM acts as a nucleation site for the P3HT crystalline growth during annealing, increasing the number of the edge-on lamellae, and preferentially increasing the domain size of face on and edge-on lamellae, with minor growth of the randomly oriented lamellae