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Dive into the research topics where Aaron M. Lindenberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Aaron M. Lindenberg.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

A Bismuth-Halide Double Perovskite with Long Carrier Recombination Lifetime for Photovoltaic Applications

Adam H. Slavney; Te Hu; Aaron M. Lindenberg; Hemamala I. Karunadasa

Despite the remarkable rise in efficiencies of solar cells containing the lead-halide perovskite absorbers RPbX3 (R = organic cation; X = Br(-) or I(-)), the toxicity of lead remains a concern for the large-scale implementation of this technology. This has spurred the search for lead-free materials with similar optoelectronic properties. Here, we use the double-perovskite structure to incorporate nontoxic Bi(3+) into the perovskite lattice in Cs2AgBiBr6 (1). The solid shows a long room-temperature fundamental photoluminescence (PL) lifetime of ca. 660 ns, which is very encouraging for photovoltaic applications. Comparison between single-crystal and powder PL decay curves of 1 suggests inherently high defect tolerance. The material has an indirect bandgap of 1.95 eV, suited for a tandem solar cell. Furthermore, 1 is significantly more heat and moisture stable compared to (MA)PbI3. The extremely promising optical and physical properties of 1 shown here motivate further exploration of both inorganic and hybrid halide double perovskites for photovoltaics and other optoelectronics.


Science | 2011

Observation of Transient Structural-Transformation Dynamics in a Cu2S Nanorod

Haimei Zheng; Jessy B. Rivest; Timothy A. Miller; Bryce Sadtler; Aaron M. Lindenberg; Michael F. Toney; Lin-Wang Wang; C. Kisielowski; A. Paul Alivisatos

Structural fluctuations between two equilibrium phases are observed in copper sulfide nanoparticles. The study of first-order structural transformations has been of great interest to scientists in many disciplines. Expectations from phase-transition theory are that the system fluctuates between two equilibrium structures near the transition point and that the region of transition broadens in small crystals. We report the direct observation of structural fluctuations within a single nanocrystal using transmission electron microscopy. We observed trajectories of structural transformations in individual nanocrystals with atomic resolution, which reveal details of the fluctuation dynamics, including nucleation, phase propagation, and pinning of structural domains by defects. Such observations provide crucial insight for the understanding of microscopic pathways of phase transitions.


2D Materials | 2016

2D materials advances: From large scale synthesis and controlled heterostructures to improved characterization techniques, defects and applications

Zhong Lin; Amber McCreary; Natalie Briggs; Shruti Subramanian; Kehao Zhang; Yifan Sun; Xufan Li; Nicholas J. Borys; Hongtao Yuan; Susan K. Fullerton-Shirey; Alexey Chernikov; Hui Zhao; Stephen McDonnell; Aaron M. Lindenberg; Kai Xiao; Brian J. LeRoy; Marija Drndic; James C. M. Hwang; Jiwoong Park; Manish Chhowalla; Raymond E. Schaak; Ali Javey; Mark C. Hersam; Joshua A. Robinson; Mauricio Terrones

Author(s): Lin, Z; McCreary, A; Briggs, N; Subramanian, S; Zhang, K; Sun, Y; Li, X; Borys, NJ; Yuan, H; Fullerton-Shirey, SK; Chernikov, A; Zhao, H; McDonnell, S; Lindenberg, AM; Xiao, K; Le Roy, BJ; Drndic, M; Hwang, JCM; Park, J; Chhowalla, M; Schaak, RE; Javey, A; Hersam, MC; Robinson, J; Terrones, M | Abstract:


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2015

Mega-electron-volt ultrafast electron diffraction at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

Stephen Weathersby; Garth Brown; Martin Centurion; T. Chase; Ryan Coffee; Jeff Corbett; John Eichner; J. Frisch; Alan Fry; Markus Gühr; Nick Hartmann; C. Hast; Robert Hettel; Renee K. Jobe; Erik N. Jongewaard; James Lewandowski; Renkai Li; Aaron M. Lindenberg; Igor Makasyuk; Justin E. May; D. McCormick; M. N. Nguyen; A. H. Reid; Xiaozhe Shen; Klaus Sokolowski-Tinten; T. Vecchione; Sharon Vetter; J. Wu; Jie Yang; Hermann A. Dürr

Ultrafast electron probes are powerful tools, complementary to x-ray free-electron lasers, used to study structural dynamics in material, chemical, and biological sciences. High brightness, relativistic electron beams with femtosecond pulse duration can resolve details of the dynamic processes on atomic time and length scales. SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory recently launched the Ultrafast Electron Diffraction (UED) and microscopy Initiative aiming at developing the next generation ultrafast electron scattering instruments. As the first stage of the Initiative, a mega-electron-volt (MeV) UED system has been constructed and commissioned to serve ultrafast science experiments and instrumentation development. The system operates at 120-Hz repetition rate with outstanding performance. In this paper, we report on the SLAC MeV UED system and its performance, including the reciprocal space resolution, temporal resolution, and machine stability.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2004

A setup for ultrafast time-resolved x-ray absorption spectroscopy

Melanie Saes; Frank van Mourik; Wojciech Gawelda; Maik Kaiser; Majed Chergui; Christian Bressler; Daniel Grolimund; Rafael Abela; T. E. Glover; Philip A. Heimann; Robert W. Schoenlein; Steven L. Johnson; Aaron M. Lindenberg; R. W. Falcone

We present a setup which allows the measurement of time-resolved x-ray absorption spectra with picosecond temporal resolution on liquid samples at the Advanced Light Source at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratories. The temporal resolution is limited by the pulse width of the synchrotron source. We characterize the different sources of noise that limit the experiment and present a single-pulse detection scheme.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

Intense terahertz pulses from SLAC electron beams using coherent transition radiation

Z. Wu; Alan Fisher; John Goodfellow; M. Fuchs; Dan Daranciang; M. J. Hogan; Henrik Loos; Aaron M. Lindenberg

SLAC has two electron accelerators, the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) and the Facility for Advanced Accelerator Experimental Tests (FACET), providing high-charge, high-peak-current, femtosecond electron bunches. These characteristics are ideal for generating intense broadband terahertz (THz) pulses via coherent transition radiation. For LCLS and FACET respectively, the THz pulse duration is typically 20 and 80 fs RMS and can be tuned via the electron bunch duration; emission spectra span 3-30 THz and 0.5 THz-5 THz; and the energy in a quasi-half-cycle THz pulse is 0.2 and 0.6 mJ. The peak electric field at a THz focus has reached 4.4 GV/m (0.44 V/Å) at LCLS. This paper presents measurements of the terahertz pulses and preliminary observations of nonlinear materials response.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2009

Probing the hydrogen-bond network of water via time-resolved soft X-ray spectroscopy

Nils Huse; Haidan Wen; Dennis Nordlund; Erzsi Szilagyi; Dan Daranciang; Timothy A. Miller; Anders Nilsson; Robert W. Schoenlein; Aaron M. Lindenberg

We report time-resolved studies of hydrogen bonding in liquid H(2)O, in response to direct excitation of the O-H stretch mode at 3 mum, probed via soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the oxygen K-edge. This approach employs a newly developed nanofluidic cell for transient soft X-ray spectroscopy in the liquid phase. Distinct changes in the near-edge spectral region (XANES) are observed, and are indicative of a transient temperature rise of 10 K following transient laser excitation and rapid thermalization of vibrational energy. The rapid heating occurs at constant volume and the associated increase in internal pressure, estimated to be 8 MPa, is manifested by distinct spectral changes that differ from those induced by temperature alone. We conclude that the near-edge spectral shape of the oxygen K-edge is a sensitive probe of internal pressure, opening new possibilities for testing the validity of water models and providing new insight into the nature of hydrogen bonding in water.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2016

Mechanism for Broadband White-Light Emission from Two-Dimensional (110) Hybrid Perovskites

Te Hu; Matthew D. Smith; Emma R. Dohner; Meng-Ju Sher; Xiaoxi Wu; M. Tuan Trinh; Alan Fisher; Jeff Corbett; X.-Y. Zhu; Hemamala I. Karunadasa; Aaron M. Lindenberg

The recently discovered phenomenon of broadband white-light emission at room temperature in the (110) two-dimensional organic-inorganic perovskite (N-MEDA)[PbBr4] (N-MEDA = N(1)-methylethane-1,2-diammonium) is promising for applications in solid-state lighting. However, the spectral broadening mechanism and, in particular, the processes and dynamics associated with the emissive species are still unclear. Herein, we apply a suite of ultrafast spectroscopic probes to measure the primary events directly following photoexcitation, which allows us to resolve the evolution of light-induced emissive states associated with white-light emission at femtosecond resolution. Terahertz spectra show fast free carrier trapping and transient absorption spectra show the formation of self-trapped excitons on femtosecond time-scales. Emission-wavelength-dependent dynamics of the self-trapped exciton luminescence are observed, indicative of an energy distribution of photogenerated emissive states in the perovskite. Our results are consistent with photogenerated carriers self-trapped in a deformable lattice due to strong electron-phonon coupling, where permanent lattice defects and correlated self-trapped states lend further inhomogeneity to the excited-state potential energy surface.


Nature Communications | 2013

The mechanism of ultrafast structural switching in superionic copper (I) sulphide nanocrystals

Timothy A. Miller; Joshua S. Wittenberg; Haidan Wen; Steve T. Connor; Yi Cui; Aaron M. Lindenberg

Superionic materials are multi-component solids with simultaneous characteristics of both a solid and a liquid. Above a critical temperature associated with a structural phase transition, they exhibit liquid-like ionic conductivities and dynamic disorder within a rigid crystalline structure. Broad applications as electrochemical storage materials and resistive switching devices follow from this abrupt change in ionic mobility, but the microscopic pathways and speed limits associated with this switching process are largely unknown. Here we use ultrafast X-ray spectroscopy and scattering techniques to obtain an atomic-level, real-time view of the transition state in copper sulphide nanocrystals. We observe the transformation to occur on a twenty picosecond timescale and show that this is determined by the ionic hopping time.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Single-cycle Terahertz Pulses with >0.2 V/A Field Amplitudes via Coherent Transition Radiation

Dan Daranciang; John Goodfellow; M. Fuchs; Haidan Wen; Shambhu Ghimire; David A. Reis; Henrik Loos; Alan S. Fisher; Aaron M. Lindenberg

We demonstrate terahertz pulses with field amplitudes exceeding 0.2 V/A generated by coherent transition radiation. Femtosecond, relativistic electron bunches generated at the Linac Coherent Light Source are passed through a beryllium foil, and the emitted radiation is characterized as a function of the bunch duration and charge. Broadband pulses centered at a frequency of 10 THz with energies of 140 μJ are measured. These far-below-bandgap pulses drive a nonlinear optical response in a silicon photodiode, with which we perform nonlinear autocorrelations that yield information regarding the terahertz temporal profile. Simulations of the spatiotemporal profile agree well with experimental results.

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David A. Reis

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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R. W. Falcone

University of California

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Haidan Wen

Argonne National Laboratory

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David M. Fritz

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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