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Dive into the research topics where Alexander H. Ip is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander H. Ip.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2012

Hybrid passivated colloidal quantum dot solids

Alexander H. Ip; Susanna M. Thon; Sjoerd Hoogland; Oleksandr Voznyy; David Zhitomirsky; Ratan Debnath; Larissa Levina; Lisa R. Rollny; Graham H. Carey; Armin Fischer; Kyle W. Kemp; Illan J. Kramer; Zhijun Ning; André J. Labelle; Kang Wei Chou; Aram Amassian; Edward H. Sargent

Colloidal quantum dot (CQD) films allow large-area solution processing and bandgap tuning through the quantum size effect. However, the high ratio of surface area to volume makes CQD films prone to high trap state densities if surfaces are imperfectly passivated, promoting recombination of charge carriers that is detrimental to device performance. Recent advances have replaced the long insulating ligands that enable colloidal stability following synthesis with shorter organic linkers or halide anions, leading to improved passivation and higher packing densities. Although this substitution has been performed using solid-state ligand exchange, a solution-based approach is preferable because it enables increased control over the balance of charges on the surface of the quantum dot, which is essential for eliminating midgap trap states. Furthermore, the solution-based approach leverages recent progress in metal:chalcogen chemistry in the liquid phase. Here, we quantify the density of midgap trap states in CQD solids and show that the performance of CQD-based photovoltaics is now limited by electron-hole recombination due to these states. Next, using density functional theory and optoelectronic device modelling, we show that to improve this performance it is essential to bind a suitable ligand to each potential trap site on the surface of the quantum dot. We then develop a robust hybrid passivation scheme that involves introducing halide anions during the end stages of the synthesis process, which can passivate trap sites that are inaccessible to much larger organic ligands. An organic crosslinking strategy is then used to form the film. Finally, we use our hybrid passivated CQD solid to fabricate a solar cell with a certified efficiency of 7.0%, which is a record for a CQD photovoltaic device.


Nature Communications | 2015

Perovskite-fullerene hybrid materials suppress hysteresis in planar diodes

Jixian Xu; Andrei Buin; Alexander H. Ip; Wei Li; Oleksandr Voznyy; Riccardo Comin; Mingjian Yuan; Seokmin Jeon; Zhijun Ning; Jeffrey J. McDowell; Pongsakorn Kanjanaboos; Jon-Paul Sun; Xinzheng Lan; Li Na Quan; Dong Ha Kim; Ian G. Hill; Peter Maksymovych; Edward H. Sargent

Solution-processed planar perovskite devices are highly desirable in a wide variety of optoelectronic applications; however, they are prone to hysteresis and current instabilities. Here we report the first perovskite–PCBM hybrid solid with significantly reduced hysteresis and recombination loss achieved in a single step. This new material displays an efficient electrically coupled microstructure: PCBM is homogeneously distributed throughout the film at perovskite grain boundaries. The PCBM passivates the key PbI3− antisite defects during the perovskite self-assembly, as revealed by theory and experiment. Photoluminescence transient spectroscopy proves that the PCBM phase promotes electron extraction. We showcase this mixed material in planar solar cells that feature low hysteresis and enhanced photovoltage. Using conductive AFM studies, we reveal the memristive properties of perovskite films. We close by positing that PCBM, by tying up both halide-rich antisites and unincorporated halides, reduces electric field-induced anion migration that may give rise to hysteresis and unstable diode behaviour.


Nano Letters | 2014

Materials Processing Routes to Trap-Free Halide Perovskites

Andrei Buin; Patrick Pietsch; Jixian Xu; Oleksandr Voznyy; Alexander H. Ip; Riccardo Comin; Edward H. Sargent

Photovoltaic devices based on lead iodide perovskite films have seen rapid advancements, recently achieving an impressive 17.9% certified solar power conversion efficiency. Reports have consistently emphasized that the specific choice of growth conditions and chemical precursors is central to achieving superior performance from these materials; yet the roles and mechanisms underlying the selection of materials processing route is poorly understood. Here we show that films grown under iodine-rich conditions are prone to a high density of deep electronic traps (recombination centers), while the use of a chloride precursor avoids the formation of key defects (Pb atom substituted by I) responsible for short diffusion lengths and poor photovoltaic performance. Furthermore, the lowest-energy surfaces of perovskite crystals are found to be entirely trap-free, preserving both electron and hole delocalization to a remarkable degree, helping to account for explaining the success of polycrystalline perovskite films. We construct perovskite films from I-poor conditions using a lead acetate precursor, and our measurement of a long (600 ± 40 nm) diffusion length confirms this new picture of the importance of growth conditions.


Nature Communications | 2014

Engineering colloidal quantum dot solids within and beyond the mobility-invariant regime

David Zhitomirsky; Oleksandr Voznyy; Larissa Levina; Sjoerd Hoogland; Kyle W. Kemp; Alexander H. Ip; Susanna M. Thon; Edward H. Sargent

Colloidal quantum dots are attractive materials for efficient, low-cost and facile implementation of solution-processed optoelectronic devices. Despite impressive mobilities (1-30 cm2 V(-1) s(-1)) reported for new classes of quantum dot solids, it is--surprisingly--the much lower-mobility (10(-3)-10(-2) cm2 V(-1) s(-1)) solids that have produced the best photovoltaic performance. Here we show that it is not mobility, but instead the average spacing among recombination centres that governs the diffusion length of charges in todays quantum dot solids. In this regime, colloidal quantum dot films do not benefit from further improvements in charge carrier mobility. We develop a device model that accurately predicts the thickness dependence and diffusion length dependence of devices. Direct diffusion length measurements suggest the solid-state ligand exchange procedure as a potential origin of the detrimental recombination centres. We then present a novel avenue for in-solution passivation with tightly bound chlorothiols that retain passivation from solution to film, achieving an 8.5% power conversion efficiency.


Nano Letters | 2015

High-Efficiency Colloidal Quantum Dot Photovoltaics via Robust Self-Assembled Monolayers

Gi-Hwan Kim; F. Pelayo García de Arquer; Yung Jin Yoon; Xinzheng Lan; Mengxia Liu; Oleksandr Voznyy; Zhenyu Yang; Fengjia Fan; Alexander H. Ip; Pongsakorn Kanjanaboos; Sjoerd Hoogland; Jin Young Kim; Edward H. Sargent

The optoelectronic tunability offered by colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) is attractive for photovoltaic applications but demands proper band alignment at electrodes for efficient charge extraction at minimal cost to voltage. With this goal in mind, self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) can be used to modify interface energy levels locally. However, to be effective SAMs must be made robust to treatment using the various solvents and ligands required for to fabricate high quality CQD solids. We report robust self-assembled monolayers (R-SAMs) that enable us to increase the efficiency of CQD photovoltaics. Only by developing a process for secure anchoring of aromatic SAMs, aided by deposition of the SAMs in a water-free deposition environment, were we able to provide an interface modification that was robust against the ensuing chemical treatments needed in the fabrication of CQD solids. The energy alignment at the rectifying interface was tailored by tuning the R-SAM for optimal alignment relative to the CQD quantum-confined electron energy levels. This resulted in a CQD PV record power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 10.7% with enhanced reproducibility relative to controls.


Nano Letters | 2015

Colloidal quantum dot solar cells exploiting hierarchical structuring

André J. Labelle; Susanna M. Thon; Silvia Masala; Michael M. Adachi; Haopeng Dong; Maryam Farahani; Alexander H. Ip; Andrea Fratalocchi; Edward H. Sargent

Extremely thin-absorber solar cells offer low materials utilization and simplified manufacture but require improved means to enhance photon absorption in the active layer. Here, we report enhanced-absorption colloidal quantum dot (CQD) solar cells that feature transfer-stamped solution-processed pyramid-shaped electrodes employed in a hierarchically structured device. The pyramids increase, by up to a factor of 2, the external quantum efficiency of the device at absorption-limited wavelengths near the absorber band edge. We show that absorption enhancement can be optimized with increased pyramid angle with an appreciable net improvement in power conversion efficiency, that is, with the gain in current associated with improved absorption and extraction overcoming the smaller fractional decrease in open-circuit voltage associated with increased junction area. We show that the hierarchical combination of micron-scale structured electrodes with nanoscale films provides for an optimized enhancement at absorption-limited wavelengths. We fabricate 54.7° pyramid-patterned electrodes, conformally apply the quantum dot films, and report pyramid CQD solar cells that exhibit a 24% improvement in overall short-circuit current density with champion devices providing a power conversion efficiency of 9.2%.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Ordered Nanopillar Structured Electrodes for Depleted Bulk Heterojunction Colloidal Quantum Dot Solar Cells

Illan J. Kramer; David Zhitomirsky; John D. Bass; Philip M. Rice; Teya Topuria; Leslie E. Krupp; Susanna M. Thon; Alexander H. Ip; Ratan Debnath; Ho-Cheol Kim; Edward H. Sargent

A bulk heterojunction of ordered titania nanopillars and PbS colloidal quantum dots is developed. By using a pre-patterned template, an ordered titania nanopillar matrix with nearest neighbours 275 nm apart and height of 300 nm is fabricated and subsequently filled in with PbS colloidal quantum dots to form an ordered depleted bulk heterojunction exhibiting power conversion efficiency of 5.6%.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

A two-step route to planar perovskite cells exhibiting reduced hysteresis

Alexander H. Ip; Li Na Quan; Michael M. Adachi; Jeffrey J. McDowell; Jixian Xu; Dong Ha Kim; Edward H. Sargent

A simple two-step method was used to produce efficient planar organolead halide perovskite solar cells. Films produced using solely iodine containing precursors resulted in poor morphology and failed devices, whereas addition of chlorine to the process greatly improved morphology and resulted in dense, uniform perovskite films. This process was used to produce perovskite solar cells with a fullerene-based passivation layer. The hysteresis effect, to which planar perovskite devices are otherwise prone, was greatly suppressed through the use of this interface modifier. The combined techniques resulted in perovskite solar cells having a stable efficiency exceeding 11%. This straightforward fabrication procedure holds promise in development of various optoelectronic applications of planar perovskite films.


ACS Nano | 2013

Role of bond adaptability in the passivation of colloidal quantum dot solids.

Susanna M. Thon; Alexander H. Ip; Oleksandr Voznyy; Larissa Levina; Kyle W. Kemp; Graham H. Carey; Silvia Masala; Edward H. Sargent

Colloidal quantum dot (CQD) solids are attractive materials for photovoltaic devices due to their low-cost solution-phase processing, high absorption cross sections, and their band gap tunability via the quantum size effect. Recent advances in CQD solar cell performance have relied on new surface passivation strategies. Specifically, cadmium cation passivation of surface chalcogen sites in PbS CQDs has been shown to contribute to lowered trap state densities and improved photovoltaic performance. Here we deploy a generalized solution-phase passivation strategy as a means to improving CQD surface management. We connect the effects of the choice of metal cation on solution-phase surface passivation, film-phase trap density of states, minority carrier mobility, and photovoltaic power conversion efficiency. We show that trap passivation and midgap density of states determine photovoltaic device performance and are strongly influenced by the choice of metal cation. Supported by density functional theory simulations, we propose a model for the role of cations, a picture wherein metals offering the shallowest electron affinities and the greatest adaptability in surface bonding configurations eliminate both deep and shallow traps effectively even in submonolayer amounts. This work illustrates the importance of materials choice in designing a flexible passivation strategy for optimum CQD device performance.


Advanced Materials | 2014

The Complete In-Gap Electronic Structure of Colloidal Quantum Dot Solids and Its Correlation with Electronic Transport and Photovoltaic Performance

Khabiboulakh Katsiev; Alexander H. Ip; Armin Fischer; Iori Tanabe; Xin Zhang; Ahmad R. Kirmani; Oleksandr Voznyy; Lisa R. Rollny; Kang Wei Chou; Susanna M. Thon; Graham H. Carey; Xiaoyu Cui; Aram Amassian; Peter A. Dowben; Edward H. Sargent; Osman M. Bakr

The direct observation of the complete electronic band structure of a family of PbS CQD solids via photoelectron spectroscopy is reported. We investigate how materials processing strategies, such as the latest passivation methods that produce record-performance photovoltaics, achieve their performance advances. Halide passivated films show a drastic reduction in states in the midgap, contributing to a marked improvement in the device performance.

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