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Featured researches published by Bruno Ehrler.


Science | 2016

Photon recycling in lead-iodide perovskite solar cells

Luis M. Pazos-Outón; M. Szumilo; Robin Lamboll; Johannes M. Richter; Micaela Crespo-Quesada; Mojtaba Abdi-Jalebi; Harry J. Beeson; M. Vru ini; Mejd Alsari; Henry J. Snaith; Bruno Ehrler; Richard H. Friend; Felix Deschler

Perovskite solar cells recycle photons Inorganic-organic perovskite solar cells are very efficient in part because the charge carriers exhibit very long path lengths. Pazos-Outón et al. show that photon recycling, as seen previously in highly efficient gallium arsenide solar cells, contributes to this effect (see the Perspective by Yablonovitch). In most solar cells, the recombination of photogenerated charge carriers (electrons and holes) wastes all of the energy. In these lead tri-iodide cells, recombination emits a photon that can be reabsorbed and create more charge carriers. Science, this issue p. 1430; see also p. 1401 Exceptionally long charge-extraction lengths are enabled by multiple cycles of photon absorption and emission. [Also see Perspective by Yablonovitch] Lead-halide perovskites have emerged as high-performance photovoltaic materials. We mapped the propagation of photogenerated luminescence and charges from a local photoexcitation spot in thin films of lead tri-iodide perovskites. We observed light emission at distances of ≥50 micrometers and found that the peak of the internal photon spectrum red-shifts from 765 to ≥800 nanometers. We used a lateral-contact solar cell with selective electron- and hole-collecting contacts and observed that charge extraction for photoexcitation >50 micrometers away from the contacts arose from repeated recycling between photons and electron-hole pairs. Thus, energy transport is not limited by diffusive charge transport but can occur over long distances through multiple absorption-diffusion-emission events. This process creates high excitation densities within the perovskite layer and allows high open-circuit voltages.


Nano Letters | 2012

Singlet Exciton Fission-Sensitized Infrared Quantum Dot Solar Cells

Bruno Ehrler; Mark W. Wilson; Akshay Rao; Richard H. Friend; Neil C. Greenham

We demonstrate an organic/inorganic hybrid photovoltaic device architecture that uses singlet exciton fission to permit the collection of two electrons per absorbed high-energy photon while simultaneously harvesting low-energy photons. In this solar cell, infrared photons are absorbed using lead sulfide (PbS) nanocrystals. Visible photons are absorbed in pentacene to create singlet excitons, which undergo rapid exciton fission to produce pairs of triplets. Crucially, we identify that these triplet excitons can be ionized at an organic/inorganic heterointerface. We report internal quantum efficiencies exceeding 50% and power conversion efficiencies approaching 1%. These findings suggest an alternative route to circumvent the Shockley-Queisser limit on the power conversion efficiency of single-junction solar cells.


Nature Communications | 2012

In situ measurement of exciton energy in hybrid singlet-fission solar cells

Bruno Ehrler; Brian J. Walker; Marcus L. Böhm; Mark W. Wilson; Yana Vaynzof; Richard H. Friend; Neil C. Greenham

Singlet exciton fission-sensitized solar cells have the potential to exceed the Shockley-Queisser limit by generating additional photocurrent from high-energy photons. Pentacene is an organic semiconductor that undergoes efficient singlet fission--the conversion of singlet excitons into pairs of triplets. However, the pentacene triplet is non-emissive, and uncertainty regarding its energy has hindered device design. Here we present an in situ measurement of the pentacene triplet energy by fabricating a series of bilayer solar cells with infrared-absorbing nanocrystals of varying bandgaps. We show that the pentacene triplet energy is at least 0.85 eV and at most 1.00 eV in operating devices. Our devices generate photocurrent from triplets, and achieve external quantum efficiencies up to 80%, and power conversion efficiencies of 4.7%. This establishes the general use of nanocrystal size series to measure the energy of non-emissive excited states, and suggests that fission-sensitized solar cells are a favourable candidate for third-generation photovoltaics.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2013

Singlet Exciton Fission in Polycrystalline Pentacene: From Photophysics toward Devices

Mark W. Wilson; Akshay Rao; Bruno Ehrler; Richard H. Friend

Singlet exciton fission is the process in conjugated organic molecules bywhich a photogenerated singlet exciton couples to a nearby chromophore in the ground state, creating a pair of triplet excitons. Researchers first reported this phenomenon in the 1960s, an event that sparked further studies in the following decade. These investigations used fluorescence spectroscopy to establish that exciton fission occurred in single crystals of several acenes. However, research interest has been recently rekindled by the possibility that singlet fission could be used as a carrier multiplication technique to enhance the efficiency of photovoltaic cells. The most successful architecture to-date involves sensitizing a red-absorbing photoactive layer with a blue-absorbing material that undergoes fission, thereby generating additional photocurrent from higher-energy photons. The quest for improved solar cells has spurred a drive to better understand the fission process, which has received timely aid from modern techniques for time-resolved spectroscopy, quantum chemistry, and small-molecule device fabrication. However, the consensus interpretation of the initial studies using ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy was that exciton fission was suppressed in polycrystalline thin films of pentacene, a material that would be otherwise expected to be an ideal model system, as well as a viable candidate for fission-sensitized photovoltaic devices. In this Account, we review the results of our recent transient absorption and device-based studies of polycrystalline pentacene. We address the controversy surrounding the assignment of spectroscopic features in transient absorption data, and illustrate how a consistent interpretation is possible. This work underpins our conclusion that singlet fission in pentacene is extraordinarily rapid (∼80 fs) and is thus the dominant decay channel for the photoexcited singlet exciton. Further, we discuss our demonstration that triplet excitons generated via singlet fission in pentacene can be dissociated at an interface with a suitable electron acceptor, such as fullerenes and infrared-absorbing inorganic semiconducting quantum dots. We highlight our recent reports of a pentacene/PbSe hybrid solar cell with a power conversion efficiency of 4.7% and of a pentacene/PbSe/amorphous silicon photovoltaic device. Although substantive challenges remain, both to better our understanding of the mechanism of singlet exciton fission and to optimize device performance, this realization of a solar cell where photocurrent is simultaneously contributed from a blue-absorbing fission-capable material and an infrared-absorbing conventional cell is an important step towards a dual-bandgap, single-junction, fission-enhanced photovoltaic device, which could one day surpass the Shockley-Queisser limit.


Nature Materials | 2014

Resonant energy transfer of triplet excitons from pentacene to PbSe nanocrystals

Maxim Tabachnyk; Bruno Ehrler; Simon Gélinas; Marcus L. Böhm; Brian J. Walker; Kevin P. Musselman; Neil C. Greenham; Richard H. Friend; Akshay Rao

The efficient transfer of energy between organic and inorganic semiconductors is a widely sought after property, but has so far been limited to the transfer of spin-singlet excitons. Here we report efficient resonant-energy transfer of molecular spin-triplet excitons from organic semiconductors to inorganic semiconductors. We use ultrafast optical absorption spectroscopy to track the dynamics of triplets, generated in pentacene through singlet exciton fission, at the interface with lead selenide (PbSe) nanocrystals. We show that triplets transfer to PbSe rapidly (<1 ps) and efficiently, with 1.9 triplets transferred for every photon absorbed in pentacene, but only when the bandgap of the nanocrystals is close to resonance (±0.2 eV) with the triplet energy. Following triplet transfer, the excitation can undergo either charge separation, allowing photovoltaic operation, or radiative recombination in the nanocrystal, enabling luminescent harvesting of triplet exciton energy in light-emitting structures.


ACS Nano | 2013

Preventing Interfacial Recombination in Colloidal Quantum Dot Solar Cells by Doping the Metal Oxide

Bruno Ehrler; Kevin P. Musselman; Marcus L. Böhm; Frederik S. F. Morgenstern; Yana Vaynzof; Brian J. Walker; Judith L. MacManus-Driscoll; Neil C. Greenham

Recent research has pushed the efficiency of colloidal quantum dot solar cells toward a level that spurs commercial interest. Quantum dot/metal oxide bilayers form the most efficient colloidal quantum dot solar cells, and most studies have advanced the understanding of the quantum dot component. We study the interfacial recombination process in depleted heterojunction colloidal quantum dot (QD) solar cells formed with ZnO as the oxide by varying (i) the carrier concentration of the ZnO layer and (ii) the density of intragap recombination sites in the QD layer. We find that the open-circuit voltage and efficiency of PbS QD/ZnO devices can be improved by 50% upon doping of the ZnO with nitrogen to reduce its carrier concentration. In contrast, doping the ZnO did not change the performance of PbSe QD/ZnO solar cells. We use X-ray photoemission spectroscopy, ultraviolet photoemission spectroscopy, transient photovoltage decay measurements, transient absorption spectroscopy, and intensity-dependent photocurrent measurements to investigate the origin of this effect. We find a significant density of intragap states within the band gap of the PbS quantum dots. These states facilitate recombination at the PbS/ZnO interface, which can be suppressed by reducing the density of occupied states in the ZnO. For the PbSe QD/ZnO solar cells, where fewer intragap states are observed in the quantum dots, the interfacial recombination channel does not limit device performance. Our study sheds light on the mechanisms of interfacial recombination in colloidal quantum dot solar cells and emphasizes the influence of quantum dot intragap states and metal oxide properties on this loss pathway.


Advanced Energy Materials | 2014

Improved Open- Circuit Voltage in ZnO-PbSe Quantum Dot Solar Cells by Understanding and Reducing Losses Arising from the ZnO Conduction Band Tail.

Robert L. Z. Hoye; Bruno Ehrler; Marcus L. Böhm; David Muñoz-Rojas; Rashid Altamimi; Ahmed Y. Alyamani; Yana Vaynzof; Aditya Sadhanala; G Ercolano; Neil C. Greenham; Richard H. Friend; Judith L. MacManus-Driscoll; Kevin P. Musselman

Colloidal quantum dot solar cells (CQDSCs) are attracting growing attention owing to significant improvements in efficiency. However, even the best depleted-heterojunction CQDSCs currently display open-circuit voltages (VOCs) at least 0.5 V below the voltage corresponding to the bandgap. We find that the tail of states in the conduction band of the metal oxide layer can limit the achievable device efficiency. By continuously tuning the zinc oxide conduction band position via magnesium doping, we probe this critical loss pathway in ZnO–PbSe CQDSCs and optimize the energetic position of the tail of states, thereby increasing both the VOC (from 408 mV to 608 mV) and the device efficiency.


Nano Letters | 2015

Lead Telluride Quantum Dot Solar Cells Displaying External Quantum Efficiencies Exceeding 120

Marcus L. Böhm; Tom C. Jellicoe; Maxim Tabachnyk; Nathaniel J. L. K. Davis; Florencia Wisnivesky-Rocca-Rivarola; Caterina Ducati; Bruno Ehrler; Artem A. Bakulin; Neil C. Greenham

Multiple exciton generation (MEG) in semiconducting quantum dots is a process that produces multiple charge-carrier pairs from a single excitation. MEG is a possible route to bypass the Shockley-Queisser limit in single-junction solar cells but it remains challenging to harvest charge-carrier pairs generated by MEG in working photovoltaic devices. Initial yields of additional carrier pairs may be reduced due to ultrafast intraband relaxation processes that compete with MEG at early times. Quantum dots of materials that display reduced carrier cooling rates (e.g., PbTe) are therefore promising candidates to increase the impact of MEG in photovoltaic devices. Here we demonstrate PbTe quantum dot-based solar cells, which produce extractable charge carrier pairs with an external quantum efficiency above 120%, and we estimate an internal quantum efficiency exceeding 150%. Resolving the charge carrier kinetics on the ultrafast time scale with pump–probe transient absorption and pump–push–photocurrent measurements, we identify a delayed cooling effect above the threshold energy for MEG.


Nature Communications | 2015

Multiple-exciton generation in lead selenide nanorod solar cells with external quantum efficiencies exceeding 120%

Nathaniel J. L. K. Davis; Marcus L. Böhm; Maxim Tabachnyk; Florencia Wisnivesky-Rocca-Rivarola; Tom C. Jellicoe; Caterina Ducati; Bruno Ehrler; Neil C. Greenham

Multiple-exciton generation—a process in which multiple charge-carrier pairs are generated from a single optical excitation—is a promising way to improve the photocurrent in photovoltaic devices and offers the potential to break the Shockley–Queisser limit. One-dimensional nanostructures, for example nanorods, have been shown spectroscopically to display increased multiple exciton generation efficiencies compared with their zero-dimensional analogues. Here we present solar cells fabricated from PbSe nanorods of three different bandgaps. All three devices showed external quantum efficiencies exceeding 100% and we report a maximum external quantum efficiency of 122% for cells consisting of the smallest bandgap nanorods. We estimate internal quantum efficiencies to exceed 150% at relatively low energies compared with other multiple exciton generation systems, and this demonstrates the potential for substantial improvements in device performance due to multiple exciton generation.


Nano Letters | 2015

Solution-Processable Singlet Fission Photovoltaic Devices

Le Yang; Maxim Tabachnyk; Sam L. Bayliss; Marcus L. Böhm; Katharina Broch; Neil C. Greenham; Richard H. Friend; Bruno Ehrler

We demonstrate the successful incorporation of a solution-processable singlet fission material, 6,13-bis(triisopropylsilylethynyl)pentacene (TIPS-pentacene), into photovoltaic devices. TIPS-pentacene rapidly converts high-energy singlet excitons into pairs of triplet excitons via singlet fission, potentially doubling the photocurrent from high-energy photons. Low-energy photons are captured by small-bandgap electron-accepting lead chalcogenide nanocrystals. This is the first solution-processable singlet fission system that performs with substantial efficiency with maximum power conversion efficiencies exceeding 4.8%, and external quantum efficiencies of up to 60% in the TIPS-pentacene absorption range. With PbSe nanocrystal of suitable bandgap, its internal quantum efficiency reaches 170 ± 30%.

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Brian J. Walker

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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