Efficiency enhancement of small molecule organic solar cells using hexapropyltruxene as an interface layer

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY C 8:14 (2020) 4909-4918

Authors:

Hanyang Ye, Sameer Vajjala Kesava, Josue F Martinez Hardigree, Roisin E Brown, Giulio Mazzotta, Ross Warren, Peter J Skabara, Moritz Riede

Abstract:

This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry. The quenching of excitons in organic solar cells can play a significant role in limiting their power conversion efficiency (PCE). In this article, we investigate the effect of a thin layer of hexapropyltruxene inserted at the interface between the electron donor boron subphthalocyanine chloride (SubPc) and its underlying hole contact in planar heterojunction solar cells. We find that a 3.8 nm hexapropyltruxene interlayer between the molybdenum oxide (MoOx) hole contact and SubPc is sufficient to improve PCE in SubPc/C60 fullerene solar cells from 2.6% to 3.0%, a ∼20% performance improvement. While the absorption stays roughly the same, the comparison of external and internal quantum efficiencies reveals a significant increase in SubPc's contribution to the current for light with wavelengths between 520 and 600 nm. Microstructure and surface morphology assessed with in situ Grazing-Incidence Wide-Angle X-Ray Scattering (GIWAXS) and Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM), are evaluated alongside in situ spectroscopic ellipsometry, and photoluminescence measurements. The microstructural investigations demonstrate changes to the surface and bulk of SubPc grown atop a hexapropyltruxene interlayer indicating that the latter acts as a template layer in a similar way as MoOx. However, the improvement in PCE is found to be mainly via reduced exciton quenching at the MoOx contact with the insertion of the hexapropyltruxene layer.

Exciton efficiency beyond the spin statistical limit in organic light emitting diodes based on anthracene derivatives

Journal of Materials Chemistry C Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) 8 (2020) 3773-3783

Authors:

Nidhi Sharma, Michael Yin Wong, David Hall, Eduard Spuling, Francisco Tenopala-Carmona, Alberto Privitera, Graeme Copley, David Bradford Cordes, Alexandra Slawin, Caroline Murawski, Malte C Gather, David Beljonne, Yoann Olivier, Ifor DW Samuel, Eli Zysman-Colman

Abstract:

We report two donor–acceptor (D–A) materials based on a cyanoanthracene acceptor paired with diphenylamine (DPAAnCN) and carbazole (CzAnCN) donor moieties. These compounds show hybrid locally excited (LE) charge-transfer (CT) excited states (HLCT), which we demonstrated through a combined photophysical and computational study. Vacuum-deposited organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) using these HLCT emitters exhibit maximum external quantum efficiencies (EQEmax) close to 6%, with impressive exciton utilization efficiency (Φs) of >50%, far exceeding the spin statistic limit of 25%. We rule out triplet–triplet annihilation and thermally activated delayed fluorescence as triplet harvesting mechanisms along with horizontal orientation of emitters to enhance light outcoupling and, instead, propose a “hot exciton” channel involving the nearly isoenergetic T2 and S1 states.

Filamentary high-resolution electrical probes for nanoengineering

Nano Letters American Chemical Society 20:2 (2020) 1067-1073

Authors:

Jia Hao Eugene Soh, GS Sarwat, G Mazzotta, BF Porter, MK Riede, R Nicholas, JS Kim, H Bhaskaran

Abstract:

Confining electric fields to a nanoscale region is challenging yet crucial for applications such as high resolution probing of electrical properties of materials and electric-field manipulation of nanoparticles. State-of-the-art techniques involving atomic force microscopy typically have a lateral resolution limit of tens of nanometers due to limitations in the probe geometry and stray electric fields that extend over space. Engineering the probes is the most direct approach to improving this resolution limit. However, current methods to fabricate high-resolution probes, which can effectively confine the electric fields laterally involve expensive and sophisticated probe manipulation, which has limited the use of this approach. Here, we demonstrate that nanoscale phase switching of configurable thin films on probes can result in high-resolution electrical probes. These configurable coatings can be both germanium-antimony-tellurium (GST) as well as amorphous-carbon, materials known to undergo electric field-induced non-volatile, yet reversible switching. By forming a localized conductive filament through phase transition, we demonstrate a spatial resolution of electrical field beyond the geometrical limitations of commercial platinum probes (i.e. an improvement of ~48%). We then utilize these confined electric fields to manipulate nanoparticles with single nanoparticle precision via dielectrophoresis. Our results advance the field of nanomanufacturing and metrology with direct applications for pick and place assembly at the nanoscale.

Direct observation and evolution of electronic coupling between organic semiconductors

91̽»¨ (2020)

Authors:

Sameer Vajjala Kesava, Moritz Riede

Abstract:

The data is in-situ spectroscopic ellipsometry data (mainly for psi and delta) used in the development and application of the DART method. CompleteEASE software from J.A.Woollam company was used for acquisition using RC2 Woollam ellipsometer, and exported in text document format. It can be imported using excel or in python.

Development of a beam imaging system for the European spallation source tuning dump

Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A Accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment Elsevier 950 (2020) 162790

Authors:

MG Ibison, CP Welsch, E Adli, H Gjersdal, G Christoforo, T Shea, C Thomas, D Naeem