Christian Sprau
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Christian Sprau.
Energy and Environmental Science | 2015
Christian Sprau; F. Buss; Michael Wagner; Dominik Landerer; Manuel Koppitz; A. Schulz; Daniel Bahro; W. Schabel; P. Scharfer; Alexander Colsmann
Several high performance polymer:fullerene bulk-heterojunction photo-active layers, deposited from the non-halogenated solvents o-xylene or anisole in combination with the eco-compatible additive p-anisaldehyde, are investigated. The respective solar cells yield excellent power conversion efficiencies up to 9.5%, outperforming reference devices deposited from the commonly used halogenated chlorobenzene/1,8-diiodooctane solvent/additive combination. The impact of the processing solvent on the bulk-heterojunction properties is exemplified on solar cells comprising benzodithiophene-thienothiophene co-polymers and functionalized fullerenes (PTB7:PC71BM). The additive p-anisaldehyde improves film formation, enhances polymer order, reduces fullerene agglomeration and shows high volatility, thereby positively affecting layer deposition, improving charge carrier extraction and reducing drying time, the latter being crucial for future large area roll-to-roll device fabrication.
Macromolecular Rapid Communications | 2017
Christos L. Chochos; Sofia Drakopoulou; Athanasios Katsouras; Benedetta M. Squeo; Christian Sprau; Alexander Colsmann; Vasilis G. Gregoriou; Alex-Palma Cando; Sybille Allard; Ullrich Scherf; Nicola Gasparini; Negar Kazerouni; Tayebeh Ameri; Christoph J. Brabec; Apostolos Avgeropoulos
Low-bandgap near-infrared polymers are usually synthesized using the common donor-acceptor (D-A) approach. However, recently polymer chemists are introducing more complex chemical concepts for better fine tuning of their optoelectronic properties. Usually these studies are limited to one or two polymer examples in each case study so far, though. In this study, the dependence of optoelectronic and macroscopic (device performance) properties in a series of six new D-A1 -D-A2 low bandgap semiconducting polymers is reported for the first time. Correlation between the chemical structure of single-component polymer films and their optoelectronic properties has been achieved in terms of absorption maxima, optical bandgap, ionization potential, and electron affinity. Preliminary organic photovoltaic results based on blends of the D-A1 -D-A2 polymers as the electron donor mixed with the fullerene derivative [6,6]-phenyl-C71 -butyric acid methyl ester demonstrate power conversion efficiencies close to 4% with short-circuit current densities (J sc ) of around 11 mA cm-2 , high fill factors up to 0.70, and high open-circuit voltages (V oc s) of 0.70 V. All the devices are fabricated in an inverted architecture with the photoactive layer processed in air with doctor blade technique, showing the compatibility with roll-to-roll large-scale manufacturing processes.
Advanced Materials | 2017
Pascal Friederich; Verónica Gómez; Christian Sprau; Velimir Meded; Timo Strunk; Michael Jenne; Andrea Magri; Franz Symalla; Alexander Colsmann; Mario Ruben; Wolfgang Wenzel
Organic semiconductors find a wide range of applications, such as in organic light emitting diodes, organic solar cells, and organic field effect transistors. One of their most striking disadvantages in comparison to crystalline inorganic semiconductors is their low charge-carrier mobility, which manifests itself in major device constraints such as limited photoactive layer thicknesses. Trial-and-error attempts to increase charge-carrier mobility are impeded by the complex interplay of the molecular and electronic structure of the material with its morphology. Here, the viability of a multiscale simulation approach to rationally design materials with improved electron mobility is demonstrated. Starting from one of the most widely used electron conducting materials (Alq3 ), novel organic semiconductors with tailored electronic properties are designed for which an improvement of the electron mobility by three orders of magnitude is predicted and experimentally confirmed.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2018
Konstantin Glaser; Patrick Beu; Daniel Bahro; Christian Sprau; Andreas Pütz; Alexander Colsmann
Due to the complex optical field, the optimization of layer thicknesses in organic tandem solar cells is a very time-consuming task which is commonly approached in an iterative sample-by-sample fabrication routine or by preliminary optical simulations. In this work, a facile and comprehensive experimental approach to determine optimized absorber layer thicknesses is presented. Both absorber layers are deposited with orthogonal thickness gradients. The spatially resolved mapping of the devices photocurrent produces more than 200 data points and allows the identification of the optimum layer thickness combination. This two-dimensional optimization process is benchmarked against sample-by-sample and one-dimensional sample optimization. All layers of the tandem solar cells were doctor bladed, eventually enabling the fabrication of a solar module with a photoactive area of 24 cm2 comprising four monolithically connected solar cells, excelling with a power conversion efficiency of 5.2%.
Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells | 2012
Felix Nickel; Christian Sprau; Michael Klein; Panagiota Kapetana; Nico Christ; Xin Liu; Soenke Klinkhammer; Uli Lemmer; Alexander Colsmann
Advanced Materials Interfaces | 2016
Zequn Cui; Jianxia Sun; Dominik Landerer; Christian Sprau; Richard Thelen; Alexander Colsmann; Hendrik Hölscher; Wanli Ma; Lifeng Chi
Journal of Polymer Science Part A | 2018
Christos L. Chochos; Athanasios Katsouras; Sofia Drakopoulou; Christina Miskaki; Miron Krassas; Pavlos Tzourmpakis; George Kakavelakis; Christian Sprau; Alexander Colsmann; Benedetta M. Squeo; Vasilis G. Gregoriou; Emmanuel Kymakis; Apostolos Avgeropoulos
Journal of Polymer Science Part A | 2018
Diana Zimmermann; Christian Sprau; Jonas Schröder; Vasilis G. Gregoriou; Apostolos Avgeropoulos; Christos L. Chochos; Alexander Colsmann; Silvia Janietz; Hartmut Krüger
Advanced Materials Interfaces | 2016
Zequn Cui; Jianxia Sun; Dominik Landerer; Christian Sprau; Richard Thelen; Alexander Colsmann; Hendrik Hölscher; Wanli Ma; Lifeng Chi
Archive | 2015
T. Fritzensmeier; F. Buss; Christian Sprau; Alexander Colsmann; W. Schabel; P. Scharfer