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Dive into the research topics where Andrew R. Akbashev is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew R. Akbashev.


Nature | 2013

Perovskite oxides for visible-light-absorbing ferroelectric and photovoltaic materials

Ilya Grinberg; D. Vincent West; Maria Torres; Gaoyang Gou; David M. Stein; Liyan Wu; Guannan Chen; Eric M. Gallo; Andrew R. Akbashev; Peter K. Davies; Jonathan E. Spanier; Andrew M. Rappe

Ferroelectrics have recently attracted attention as a candidate class of materials for use in photovoltaic devices, and for the coupling of light absorption with other functional properties. In these materials, the strong inversion symmetry breaking that is due to spontaneous electric polarization promotes the desirable separation of photo-excited carriers and allows voltages higher than the bandgap, which may enable efficiencies beyond the maximum possible in a conventional p–n junction solar cell. Ferroelectric oxides are also stable in a wide range of mechanical, chemical and thermal conditions and can be fabricated using low-cost methods such as sol–gel thin-film deposition and sputtering. Recent work has shown how a decrease in ferroelectric layer thickness and judicious engineering of domain structures and ferroelectric–electrode interfaces can greatly increase the current harvested from ferroelectric absorber materials, increasing the power conversion efficiency from about 10−4 to about 0.5 per cent. Further improvements in photovoltaic efficiency have been inhibited by the wide bandgaps (2.7–4u2009electronvolts) of ferroelectric oxides, which allow the use of only 8–20 per cent of the solar spectrum. Here we describe a family of single-phase solid oxide solutions made from low-cost and non-toxic elements using conventional solid-state methods: [KNbO3]1u2009−u2009x[BaNi1/2Nb1/2O3u2009−u2009δ]x (KBNNO). These oxides exhibit both ferroelectricity and a wide variation of direct bandgaps in the range 1.1–3.8u2009electronvolts. In particular, the x = 0.1 composition is polar at room temperature, has a direct bandgap of 1.39u2009electronvolts and has a photocurrent density approximately 50 times larger than that of the classic ferroelectric (Pb,La)(Zr,Ti)O3 material. The ability of KBNNO to absorb three to six times more solar energy than the current ferroelectric materials suggests a route to viable ferroelectric semiconductor-based cells for solar energy conversion and other applications.


Nano Letters | 2014

A Facile Route for Producing Single-Crystalline Epitaxial Perovskite Oxide Thin Films

Andrew R. Akbashev; Guannan Chen; Jonathan E. Spanier

We report how a low vacuum pressure process followed by a few-minute annealing enables epitaxial stabilization, producing high-quality, phase-pure, single-crystalline epitaxial, and misfit dislocation-free BiFeO3(001) thin films on SrTiO3(001) at ∼450 °C less than current routes. These results unambiguously challenge the widely held notion that atomic layer deposition (ALD) is not appropriate for attaining high-quality chemically complex oxide films on perovskite substrates in single-crystalline epitaxial form, demonstrating applicability as an inexpensive, facile, and highly scalable route.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Hollandites as a new class of multiferroics

Shuangyi Liu; Andrew R. Akbashev; Xiaohao Yang; Xiaohua Liu; Wanlu Li; Lukas Zhao; Xue Li; Alexander Couzis; Myung-Geun Han; Yimei Zhu; Lia Krusin-Elbaum; Jackie Li; Limin Huang; Simon J. L. Billinge; Jonathan E. Spanier; Stephen O'Brien

Discovery of new complex oxides that exhibit both magnetic and ferroelectric properties is of great interest for the design of functional magnetoelectrics, in which research is driven by the technologically exciting prospect of controlling charges by magnetic fields and spins by applied voltages, for sensors, 4-state logic, and spintronics. Motivated by the notion of a tool-kit for complex oxide design, we developed a chemical synthesis strategy for single-phase multifunctional lattices. Here, we introduce a new class of multiferroic hollandite Ba-Mn-Ti oxides not apparent in nature. BaMn3Ti4O14.25, designated BMT-134, possesses the signature channel-like hollandite structure, contains Mn4+ and Mn3+ in a 1:1 ratio, exhibits an antiferromagnetic phase transition (TN ~ 120u2005K) with a weak ferromagnetic ordering at lower temperatures, ferroelectricity, a giant dielectric constant at low frequency and a stable intrinsic dielectric constant of ~200 (1-100u2005MHz). With evidence of correlated antiferromagnetic and ferroelectric order, the findings point to an unexplored family of structures belonging to the hollandite supergroup with multifunctional properties, and high potential for developing new magnetoelectric materials.


APL Materials | 2015

Crystallization engineering as a route to epitaxial strain control

Andrew R. Akbashev; Aleksandr V. Plokhikh; Dmitri Barbash; Samuel E. Lofland; Jonathan E. Spanier

The controlled synthesis of epitaxial thin films offers opportunities for tuning their functional properties via enabling or suppressing strain relaxation. Examining differences in the epitaxial crystallization of amorphous oxide films, we report on an alternate, low-temperature route for strain engineering. Thin films of amorphous Bi–Fe–O were grown on (001)SrTiO3 and (001)LaAlO3 substrates via atomic layer deposition. In situ X-ray diffraction and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy studies of the crystallization of the amorphous films into the epitaxial (001)BiFeO3 phase reveal distinct evolution profiles of crystallinity with temperature. While growth on (001)SrTiO3 results in a coherently strained film, the same films obtained on (001)LaAlO3 showed an unstrained, dislocation-rich interface, with an even lower temperature onset of the perovskite phase crystallization than in the case of (001)SrTiO3. Our results demonstrate how the strain control in an epitaxial film can be accomplished via its crystallization from the amorphous state.


ChemPhysChem | 2017

Formation of BiFeO3 from a Binary Oxide Superlattice Grown by Atomic Layer Deposition

Aleksandr V. Plokhikh; Matthias Falmbigl; Iryna S. Golovina; Andrew R. Akbashev; Igor A. Karateev; Mikhail Yu. Presnyakov; Alexander L. Vasiliev; Jonathan E. Spanier

We report on the growth of polycrystalline BiFeO3 thin films on SiO2 /Si(001) and Pt(111) substrates by atomic layer deposition using the precursors ferrocene, triphenyl-bismuth, and ozone. By growing alternating layers of Fe2 O3 and Bi2 O3 , we employ a superlattice approach and demonstrate an efficient control of the cation stoichiometry. The superlattice decay and the resulting formation of polycrystalline BiFeO3 films are studied by in situ X-ray diffraction, in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and transmission electron microscopy. No intermediate ternary phases are formed and BiFeO3 crystallization is initiated in the Bi2 O3 layers at 450u2009°C following the diffusion-driven intermixing of the cations. Our study of the BiFeO3 formation provides an insight into the complex interplay between microstructural evolution, grain growth, and bismuth oxide evaporation, with implications for optimization of ferroelectric properties.


Nature Photonics | 2016

Power conversion efficiency exceeding the Shockley–Queisser limit in a ferroelectric insulator

Jonathan E. Spanier; Vladimir M. Fridkin; Andrew M. Rappe; Andrew R. Akbashev; A. Polemi; Yubo Qi; Zongquan Gu; Steve M. Young; Christopher J. Hawley; Dominic Imbrenda; Geoffrey Xiao; Andrew L. Bennett-Jackson; Craig L. Johnson


Nanoscale Ferroelectrics and Multiferroics: Key Processing and Characterization Issues, and Nanoscale Effects, Volume I & II | 2016

26. Semiconducting and Photovoltaic Ferroelectrics

Andrew R. Akbashev; Vladimir M. Fridkin; Jonathan E. Spanier


Nature Photonics | 2017

Reply to 'Reconsidering the Shockley–Queisser limit of a ferroelectric insulator device'

Jonathan E. Spanier; Vladimir M. Fridkin; Andrew M. Rappe; Andrew R. Akbashev; A. Polemi; Yubo Qi; Zongquan Gu; Steve M. Young; Christopher J. Hawley; Dominic Imbrenda; Geoffrey Xiao; Andrew L. Bennett-Jackson; Craig L. Johnson


ChemPhysChem | 2017

Back Cover: Formation of BiFeO3 from a Binary Oxide Superlattice Grown by Atomic Layer Deposition (ChemPhysChem 15/2017)

Aleksandr V. Plokhikh; Matthias Falmbigl; Iryna S. Golovina; Andrew R. Akbashev; Igor A. Karateev; Mikhail Yu. Presnyakov; Alexander L. Vasiliev; Jonathan E. Spanier


2014 ECS and SMEQ Joint International Meeting (October 5-9, 2014) | 2014

Thin Films and Superlattices in the Bi-Fe-O System Prepared by ALD

Andrew R. Akbashev; Jonathan E. Spanier

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Andrew M. Rappe

University of Pennsylvania

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