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Dive into the research topics where Alex J. Barker is active.

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Featured researches published by Alex J. Barker.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Broadband ultrafast photoluminescence spectroscopy resolves charge photogeneration via delocalized hot excitons in polymer:fullerene photovoltaic blends.

Kai Chen; Alex J. Barker; Matthew E. Reish; Keith C. Gordon; Justin M. Hodgkiss

Conventional descriptions of excitons in semiconducting polymers do not account for several important observations in polymer:fullerene photovoltaic blends, including the ultrafast time scale of charge photogeneration in phase separated blends and the intermediate role of delocalized charge transfer states. We investigate the nature of excitons in thin films of polymers and polymer:fullerene blends by using broadband ultrafast photoluminescence spectroscopy. Our technique enables us to resolve energetic relaxation, as well as the volume of excitons and population dynamics on ultrafast time scales. We resolve substantial high-energy emission from hot excitons prior to energetic relaxation, which occurs predominantly on a subpicosecond time scale. Consistent with quantum chemical calculations, ultrafast annihilation measurements show that excitons initially extend along a substantial chain length prior to localization induced by structural relaxation. Moreover, we see that hot excitons are initially highly mobile and the subsequent rapid decay in mobility is correlated with energetic relaxation. The relevance of these measurements to charge photogeneration is confirmed by our measurements in blends. We find that charge photogeneration occurs predominately via these delocalized hot exciton states in competition with relaxation and independently of temperature. As well as accounting for the ultrafast time scale of charge generation across large polymer phases, delocalized hot excitons may also account for the crucial requirement that primary charge pairs are well separated in efficient organic photovoltaic blends.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Distance distributions of photogenerated charge pairs in organic photovoltaic cells.

Alex J. Barker; Kai Chen; Justin M. Hodgkiss

Strong Coulomb interactions in organic photovoltaic cells dictate that charges must separate over relatively long distances in order to circumvent geminate recombination and produce photocurrent. In this article, we measure the distance distributions of thermalized charge pairs by accessing a regime at low temperature where charge pairs are frozen out following the primary charge separation step and recombine monomolecularly via tunneling. The exponential attenuation of tunneling rate with distance provides a sensitive probe of the distance distribution of primary charge pairs, reminiscent of electron transfer studies in proteins. By fitting recombination dynamics to distributions of recombination rates, we identified populations of charge-transfer states and well-separated charge pairs. For the wide range of materials we studied, the yield of separated charges in the tunneling regime is strongly correlated with the yield of free charges measured via their intensity-dependent bimolecular recombination dynamics at room temperature. We therefore conclude that populations of free charges are established via long-range charge separation within the thermalization time scale, thus invoking early branching between free and bound charges across an energetic barrier. Subject to assumed values of the electron tunneling attenuation constant, we estimate critical charge separation distances of ∼3-4 nm in all materials. In some blends, large fullerene crystals can enhance charge separation yields; however, the important role of the polymers is also highlighted in blends that achieved significant charge separation with minimal fullerene concentration. We expect that our approach of isolating the intrinsic properties of primary charge pairs will be of considerable value in guiding new material development and testing the validity of proposed mechanisms for long-range charge separation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015

Effect of Carrier Thermalization Dynamics on Light Emission and Amplification in Organometal Halide Perovskites.

Kai Chen; Alex J. Barker; Francis L. C. Morgan; Jonathan E. Halpert; Justin M. Hodgkiss

The remarkable rise of organometal halide perovskites as solar photovoltaic materials has been followed by promising developments in light-emitting devices, including lasers. Here we present unique insights into the processes leading to photon emission in these materials. We employ ultrafast broadband photoluminescence (PL) and transient absorption spectroscopies to directly link density dependent ultrafast charge dynamics to PL. We find that exceptionally strong PL at the band edge is preceded by thermalization of free charge carriers. Short-lived PL above the band gap is clear evidence of nonexcitonic emission from hot carriers, and ultrafast PL depolarization confirms that uncorrelated charge pairs are precursors to photon emission. Carrier thermalization has a profound effect on amplified stimulated emission at high fluence; the delayed onset of optical gain we resolve within the first 10 ps and the unusual oscillatory behavior are both consequences of the kinetic interplay between carrier thermalization and optical gain.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Transient Grating Photoluminescence Spectroscopy: An Ultrafast Method of Gating Broadband Spectra.

Kai Chen; Joseph K. Gallaher; Alex J. Barker; Justin M. Hodgkiss

Ultrafast photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy can cleanly resolve excited-state dynamics and coupling to the environment, however, there is a demand for new methods that combine broadband detection and low backgrounds. We present a new method, transient grating photoluminescence spectroscopy (TGPLS), that addresses this challenge by exploiting a focusing geometry where ultrafast broadband spectra are transiently diffracted away from the background PL. We show that TGPLS can resolve the complex spectral relaxation observed in conjugated polymer and oligomer solutions, with an essentially flat spectral response throughout the visible region and potentially beyond. The benefits we demonstrate using TGPLS could expand access to spectral information, particularly for other multichromophoric and heterogeneous materials where complex spectral relaxation is expected.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Incoherent charge separation dynamics in organic photovoltaics

Shyamal K. K. Prasad; Joseph K. Gallaher; Alex J. Barker; Han Young Woo; Mamatimin Abbas; Lionel Hirsch; Justin M. Hodgkiss

There is mounting evidence that long-range charge separation determines the efficiency of organic photovoltaic cells, yet different mechanisms remain under debate. One class of proposed mechanism is ultrafast coherent long-range charge separation, and another is a slower process whereby charges incoherently hop apart with a transiently enhanced mobility due to morphology and disorder. Here, we use transient absorption spectroscopy to probe incoherent charge separation dynamics in two different ways. First, we use a family of polymers whose backbone structures allows us to compare 2- phase donor-acceptor morphologies with 3-phase morphologies that feature an intermixed region. In the 3-phase system, we see pronounced spectral signatures associated with charges (holes) occupying the disordered intermixed region, and we track separation via biased charge diffusion to more ordered neat regions on the timescale of hundreds of picoseconds. Secondly, by resolving bimolecular charge recombination at high excitation density, we show that charge mobilities must be substantially enhanced on early timescales, which may be sufficient for separation to occur. Together, these measurements provide support for models of incoherent and relatively slow charge separation.


Selected Lectures Presented at Symposium on Ultrafast Dynamics of the 7th International Conference on Materials for Advanced Technologies | 2014

HIGH-SENSITIVITY ULTRAFAST TRANSIENT ABSORPTION SPECTROSCOPY OF ORGANIC PHOTOVOLTAIC DEVICES

Alex J. Barker; Kai Chen; Shyamal K. K. Prasad; Justin M. Hodgkiss

The design of effective materials for efficient organic photovoltaic cells requires developing a detailed photophysical model of the processes that link photon absorption to photocurrent collection. Transient absorption spectroscopy offers the potential to do so, but its value depends on the ability to carry out measurements with sensitivity of better than 10 and from femtosecond to microsecond timescales. In this article, we describe the transient absorption spectroscopy tools that we have developed specifically for probing charge photogeneration and recombination in organic photovoltaic cells, and we illustrate their implementation with several examples.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2012

Exciton-Charge Annihilation in Organic Semiconductor Films

Justin M. Hodgkiss; Sebastian Albert-Seifried; Akshay Rao; Alex J. Barker; Andrew R. Campbell; R. Alex Marsh; Richard H. Friend


ACS energy letters | 2017

Defect-Assisted Photoinduced Halide Segregation in Mixed-Halide Perovskite Thin Films

Alex J. Barker; Aditya Sadhanala; Felix Deschler; Marina Gandini; Satyaprasad P. Senanayak; Phoebe M. Pearce; Edoardo Mosconi; Andrew J. Pearson; Yue Wu; Ajay Ram Srimath Kandada; Tomas Leijtens; Filippo De Angelis; Siân E. Dutton; Annamaria Petrozza; Richard H. Friend


ACS energy letters | 2016

Photoinduced Emissive Trap States in Lead Halide Perovskite Semiconductors

Silvia G. Motti; Marina Gandini; Alex J. Barker; James M. Ball; Ajay Ram Srimath Kandada; Annamaria Petrozza


Chemistry of Materials | 2015

Thermochromism, Franck–Condon Analysis and Interfacial Dynamics of a Donor–Acceptor Copolymer with a Low Band Gap

Matthew E. Reish; Gregory S. Huff; Wonho Lee; Mohammad Afsar Uddin; Alex J. Barker; Joseph K. Gallaher; Justin M. Hodgkiss; Han Young Woo; Keith C. Gordon

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Justin M. Hodgkiss

MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology

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Kai Chen

MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology

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Joseph K. Gallaher

Victoria University of Wellington

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Annamaria Petrozza

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Matthew E. Reish

MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology

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Shyamal K. K. Prasad

MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology

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Ajay Ram Srimath Kandada

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Marina Gandini

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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