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91探花
CMP
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Dr. Brian Wieliczka

Senior Researcher

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • Snaith group
brian.wieliczka@physics.ox.ac.uk
Robert Hooke Building
  • About
  • Publications

Metal Halide Perovskite Heterostructures: Blocking Anion Diffusion with Single-Layer Graphene.

Journal of the American Chemical Society 145:4 (2023) 2052-2057

Authors:

Matthew P Hautzinger, Emily K Raulerson, Steven P Harvey, Tuo Liu, Daniel Duke, Xixi Qin, Rebecca A Scheidt, Brian M Wieliczka, Alan J Phillips, Kenneth R Graham, Volker Blum, Joseph M Luther, Matthew C Beard, Jeffrey L Blackburn

Abstract:

The development of metal halide perovskite/perovskite heterostructures is hindered by rapid interfacial halide diffusion leading to mixed alloys rather than sharp interfaces. To circumvent this outcome, we developed an ion-blocking layer consisting of single-layer graphene (SLG) deposited between the metal halide perovskite layers and demonstrated that it effectively blocks anion diffusion in a CsPbBr3/SLG/CsPbI3 heterostructure. Spatially resolved elemental analysis and spectroscopic measurements demonstrate the halides do not diffuse across the interface, whereas control samples without the SLG show rapid homogenization of the halides and loss of the sharp interface. Ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy, DFT calculations, and transient absorbance spectroscopy indicate the SLG has little electronic impact on the individual semiconductors. In the CsPbBr3/SLG/CsPbI3, we find a type I band alignment that 91探花s transfer of photogenerated carriers across the heterointerface. Light-emitting diodes (LEDs) show electroluminescence from both the CsPbBr3 and CsPbI3 layers with no evidence of ion diffusion during operation. Our approach provides opportunities to design novel all-perovskite heterostructures to facilitate the control of charge and light in optoelectronic applications.

Ultrarapid crystallization of low-dimensional perovskite with excellent stability for future high-throughput fabrication

Journal of Power Sources Elsevier BV 556 (2023) 232475

Authors:

Hongru Ma, Min Chen, Shi Wang, Qingshun Dong, Xiaopeng Zheng, Brian Wieliczka, Joseph M Luther, Xuehui Liu, Yi Zhang, Jingya Guo, Mohammad K Nazeeruddin, Yantao Shi

Colloidal Quantum Dot Solar Cells: Progressive Deposition Techniques and Future Prospects on Large鈥怉rea Fabrication

Advanced Materials Wiley 34:17 (2022) e2107888

Authors:

Qian Zhao, Rui Han, Ashley R Marshall, Shuo Wang, Brian M Wieliczka, Jian Ni, Jianjun Zhang, Jianyu Yuan, Joseph M Luther, Abhijit Hazarika, Guo鈥怰an Li

Probing the Origin of the Open Circuit Voltage in Perovskite Quantum Dot Photovoltaics.

ACS nano 15:12 (2021) 19334-19344

Authors:

Brian M Wieliczka, Jos茅 A M谩rquez, Alexandra M Bothwell, Qian Zhao, Taylor Moot, Kaitlyn T VanSant, Andrew J Ferguson, Thomas Unold, Darius Kuciauskas, Joseph M Luther

Abstract:

Perovskite quantum dots (PQDs) have many properties that make them attractive for optoelectronic applications, including expanded compositional tunability and crystallographic stabilization. While they have not achieved the same photovoltaic (PV) efficiencies of top-performing perovskite thin films, they do reproducibly show high open circuit voltage (VOC) in comparison. Further understanding of the VOC attainable in PQDs as a function of surface passivation, contact layers, and PQD composition will further progress the field and may lend useful lessons for non-QD perovskite solar cells. Here, we use photoluminescence-based spectroscopic techniques to understand and identify the governing physics of the VOC in CsPbI3 PQDs. In particular, we probe the effect of the ligand exchange and contact interfaces on the VOC and free charge carrier concentration. The free charge carrier concentration is orders of magnitude higher than in typical perovskite thin films and could be tunable through ligand chemistry. Tuning the PQD A-site cation composition via replacement of Cs+ with FA+ maintains the background carrier concentration but reduces the trap density by up to a factor of 40, reducing the VOC deficit. These results dictate how to improve PQD optoelectronic properties and PV device performance and explain the reduced interfacial recombination observed by coupling PQDs with thin-film perovskites for a hybrid absorber layer.

Wave Function Engineering in CdSe/PbS Core/Shell Quantum Dots.

ACS nano 12:6 (2018) 5539-5550

Authors:

Brian M Wieliczka, Alexey L Kaledin, William E Buhro, Richard A Loomis

Abstract:

The synthesis of epitaxial CdSe/PbS core/shell quantum dots (QDs) is reported. The PbS shell grows in a rock salt structure on the zinc blende CdSe core, thereby creating a crystal structure mismatch through additive growth. Absorption and photoluminescence (PL) band edge features shift to lower energies with increasing shell thickness, but remain above the CdSe bulk band gap. Nevertheless, the profiles of the absorption spectra vary with shell growth, indicating that the overlap of the electron and hole wave functions is changing significantly. This leads to over an order of magnitude reduction of absorption near the band gap and a large, tunable energy shift, of up to 550 meV, between the onset of strong absorption and the band edge PL. While the bulk valence and conduction bands adopt an inverse type-I alignment, the observed spectroscopic behavior is consistent with a transition between quasi-type-I and quasi-type-II behavior depending on shell thickness. Three effective mass approximation models 91探花 this hypothesis and suggest that the large difference in effective masses between the core and shell results in hole localization in the CdSe core and a delocalization of the electron across the entire QD. These results show the tuning of wave functions and transition energies in CdSe/PbS nanoheterostructures with prospects for use in optoelectronic devices for luminescent solar concentration or multiexciton generation.

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