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2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 14(35): 39976-39984, 2022 Sep 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36000715

RESUMEN

Solar cells are essentially minority carrier devices, and it is therefore of central importance to understand the pertinent carrier transport processes. Here, we advanced a transport imaging technique to directly visualize the charge motion and collection in the direction of relevant carrier transport and to understand the cell operation and degradation in state-of-the-art cadmium telluride solar cells. We revealed complex carrier transport profiles in the inhomogeneous polycrystalline thin-film solar cell, with the influence of electric junction, interface, recombination, and material composition. The pristine cell showed a unique dual peak in the carrier transport light intensity decay profile, and the dual peak feature disappeared on a degraded cell after light and heat stressing in the lab. The experiments, together with device modeling, suggested that selenium diffusion plays an important role in carrier transport. The work opens a new forum by which to understand the carrier transport and bridge the gap between atomic/nanometer-scale chemical/structural and submicrometer optoelectronic knowledge.

3.
Microsc Microanal ; 25(5): 1160-1166, 2019 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31475657

RESUMEN

Single-crystalline gallium arsenide (GaAs) grown by various techniques can exhibit hillock defects on the surface when sub-optimal growth conditions are employed. The defects act as nonradiative recombination centers and limit solar cell performance. In this paper, we applied near-field transport imaging to study hillock defects in a GaAs thin film. On the same defects, we also performed near-field cathodoluminescence, standard cathodoluminescence, electron-backscattered diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry. We found that the luminescence intensity around the hillock area is two orders of magnitude lower than on the area without hillock defects in the millimeter region, and the excess carrier diffusion length is degraded by at least a factor of five with significant local variation. The optical and transport properties are affected over a significantly larger region than the observed topography and crystallographic and chemical compositions associated with the defect.

5.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 10(51): 44854-44861, 2018 Dec 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30488692

RESUMEN

Controlled delamination of thin-film photovoltaics (PV) post-growth can reveal interfaces that are critical to device performance yet are poorly understood because of their inaccessibility within the device stack. In this work, we demonstrate a technique to lift off thin-film solar cells from their glass substrates in a clean, reproducible manner by first laminating a polymeric backsheet to the device and then thermally shocking the system at low temperatures ( T ≤ -30 °C). To enable clean delamination of diverse thin-film architectures, a theoretical framework is developed and key process control parameters are identified. Focusing on cadmium telluride (CdTe) devices, we show that the lamination temperature and device architecture control the quality of lift-off, while the rate at which the film stack is removed is controlled by the delamination temperature. Crack-free CdTe devices are removed and successfully recontacted, recovering up to 80% of the original device efficiency. The areal density of these devices is ∼0.4 kg m-2, a reduction of over an order of magnitude relative to their initial weight on glass. The framework developed here provides a pathway toward both the development of inexpensive, flexible PV with high specific power and the study of previously buried interfaces in thin-film architectures.

7.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 16(23): 11245-50, 2014 Jun 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24562323

RESUMEN

Quantum nano-structures are likely to become primary elements of future devices. However, there are a number of significant scientific challenges to real world applications of quantum devices. These include de-coherence that erodes operation of a quantum device and control issues. In nature, certain processes have been shown to use quantum mechanical processes for overcoming these barriers. One well-known example is the high energy transmission efficiency of photosynthetic light harvesting complexes. Utilizing such systems for fabricating nano-devices provides a new approach to creating self-assembled nano-energy guides. In this study, we use isolated phycocyanin (PC) proteins that can self-assemble into bundles of nanowires. We show two methods for controlling the organization of the bundles. These nanowires exhibit long range quantum energy transfer through hundreds of proteins. Such results provide new efficient building blocks for coupling to nano-devices, and shed light on distribution and the efficiency of energy transfer mechanisms in biological systems and its quantum nature.


Asunto(s)
Nanocables/química , Ficocianina/química , Teoría Cuántica , Temperatura , Transferencia de Energía , Tamaño de la Partícula , Propiedades de Superficie
8.
Opt Express ; 21(5): 6321-6, 2013 Mar 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23482201

RESUMEN

Attenuation coefficient measurements for the propagation of bandedge luminescence are made on individual ZnO nanowires by combining the localized excitation capability of a scanning electron microscope (SEM) with near-field scanning optical microscopy (NSOM) to record the distribution and intensity of wave-guided emission. Measurements were made for individual nanostructures with triangular cross-sections ranging in diameter from 680 to 2300 nm. The effective attenuation coefficient shows an inverse dependence on nanowire diameter (d(-1)), indicating scattering losses due to non-ideal waveguiding behavior.

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