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Dive into the research topics where Dane W. deQuilettes is active.

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Featured researches published by Dane W. deQuilettes.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2016

Efficient perovskite solar cells by metal ion doping

Jacob Tse-Wei Wang; Zhiping Wang; Sandeep Pathak; Wei Zhang; Dane W. deQuilettes; Florencia Wisnivesky-Rocca-Rivarola; Jian Huang; Pabitra K. Nayak; Jay B. Patel; Hanis A. Mohd Yusof; Yana Vaynzof; Rui Zhu; Ivan Ramirez; Jin Zhang; Caterina Ducati; C.R.M. Grovenor; Michael B. Johnston; David S. Ginger; R. J. Nicholas; Henry J. Snaith

Realizing the theoretical limiting power conversion efficiency (PCE) in perovskite solar cells requires a better understanding and control over the fundamental loss processes occurring in the bulk of the perovskite layer and at the internal semiconductor interfaces in devices. One of the main challenges is to eliminate the presence of charge recombination centres throughout the film which have been observed to be most densely located at regions near the grain boundaries. Here, we introduce aluminium acetylacetonate to the perovskite precursor solution, which improves the crystal quality by reducing the microstrain in the polycrystalline film. At the same time, we achieve a reduction in the non-radiative recombination rate, a remarkable improvement in the photoluminescence quantum efficiency (PLQE) and a reduction in the electronic disorder deduced from an Urbach energy of only 12.6 meV in complete devices. As a result, we demonstrate a PCE of 19.1% with negligible hysteresis in planar heterojunction solar cells comprising all organic p and n-type charge collection layers. Our work shows that an additional level of control of perovskite thin film quality is possible via impurity cation doping, and further demonstrates the continuing importance of improving the electronic quality of the perovskite absorber and the nature of the heterojunctions to further improve the solar cell performance.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015

Zr Incorporation into TiO2 Electrodes Reduces Hysteresis and Improves Performance in Hybrid Perovskite Solar Cells while Increasing Carrier Lifetimes

Hirokazu Nagaoka; Fei Ma; Dane W. deQuilettes; Sarah M. Vorpahl; Micah S. Glaz; Adam E. Colbert; Mark E. Ziffer; David S. Ginger

We investigate zirconium (Zr) incorporation into the titanium dioxide (TiO2) electron-transporting layer used in organometal halide perovskite photovoltaics. Compared to Zr-free controls, solar cells employing electrodes containing Zr exhibit increased power conversion efficiency (PCE) and decreased hysteresis. We use transient photovoltage and photocurrent extraction to measure carrier lifetimes and densities and observe longer carrier lifetimes and higher charge densities in devices on Zr-containing electrodes at microsecond times as well as longer persistent photovoltages extending from ∼milliseconds to tens of seconds. We characterize the surface stoichiometry and change in work function and reduction potential of the TiO2 upon incorporation of Zr and discuss the charge recombination at the TiO2 interface in the context of these variables. Finally, we show that the combination of Zr-TiO2 electrode modification with device pyridine treatment leads to a cumulative improvement in performance.


Science Advances | 2017

Polymer-modified halide perovskite films for efficient and stable planar heterojunction solar cells

Lijian Zuo; Hexia Guo; Dane W. deQuilettes; Sarthak Jariwala; Nicholas De Marco; Shiqi Dong; Ryan H. DeBlock; David S. Ginger; Bruce S. Dunn; Mingkui Wang; Yang Yang

The UCLA team has successfully passivated perovskite film by controlling the film growth with functional polymers as additive. The solution processing of polycrystalline perovskite films introduces trap states that can adversely affect their optoelectronic properties. Motivated by the use of small-molecule surfactants to improve the optoelectronic performance of perovskites, we demonstrate the use of polymers with coordinating groups to improve the performance of solution-processed semiconductor films. The use of these polymer modifiers results in a marked change in the electronic properties of the films, as measured by both carrier dynamics and overall device performance. The devices grown with the polymer poly(4-vinylpyridine) (PVP) show significantly enhanced power conversion efficiency from 16.9 ± 0.7% to 18.8 ± 0.8% (champion efficiency, 20.2%) from a reverse scan and stabilized champion efficiency from 17.5 to 19.1% [under a bias of 0.94 V and AM (air mass) 1.5-G, 1-sun illumination over 30 min] compared to controls without any passivation. Treating the perovskite film with PVP enables a VOC of up to 1.16 V, which is among the best reported for a CH3NH3PbI3 perovskite solar cell and one of the lowest voltage deficits reported for any perovskite to date. In addition, perovskite solar cells treated with PVP show a long shelf lifetime of up to 90 days (retaining 85% of the initial efficiency) and increased by a factor of more than 20 compared to those without any polymer (degrading to 85% after ~4 days). Our work opens up a new class of chemical additives for improving perovskite performance and should pave the way toward improving perovskite solar cells for high efficiency and stability.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Hot Hole Transfer Increasing Polaron Yields in Hybrid Conjugated Polymer/PbS Blends.

Elisabeth Strein; Dane W. deQuilettes; Stephen T. Hsieh; Adam E. Colbert; David S. Ginger

We use quasi-steady-state photoinduced absorption (PIA) to study charge generation in blends of poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl) (P3HT) with PbS nanocrystal quantum dots as a function of excitation energy. We find that, per photon absorbed, the yield of photogenerated holes present on the conjugated polymer increases with pump energy, even at wavelengths where only the quantum dots absorb. We interpret this result as direct evidence for transfer of hot holes in these conjugated polymer/quantum dot blends. These results help understand the operation of hybrid organic/inorganic photovoltaics.


RSC Advances | 2016

Design rules for the broad application of fast (<1 s) methylamine vapor based, hybrid perovskite post deposition treatments

Ting Zhao; Spencer T. Williams; Chu-Chen Chueh; Dane W. deQuilettes; Po-Wei Liang; David S. Ginger; Alex K.-Y. Jen

While organo-metal halide perovskite photovoltaics have seen rapid development, growth of high quality material remains a challenge. Herein, we report a facile post deposition treatment utilizing coordination between methylamine (CH3NH2) vapor and CH3NH3PbI3 perovskite that rapidly improves film quality, enhancing power conversion efficiency (PCE) by ∼9%. We further comprehensively analyze the physical impact of this process with regard to the materials optoelectronic properties and its detailed microstructural changes. Connecting this with an analysis of the source of organo-metal halide perovskite reactivity toward the vapor as well as phase behavior as a function of CH3NH2 vapor pressure and time, we provide design rules for the broad, rational extension of this process to new systems and scales.


ACS Nano | 2017

Tracking Photoexcited Carriers in Hybrid Perovskite Semiconductors: Trap-Dominated Spatial Heterogeneity and Diffusion

Dane W. deQuilettes; Sarthak Jariwala; Sven Burke; Mark E. Ziffer; Jacob Tse-Wei Wang; Henry J. Snaith; David S. Ginger

We use correlated confocal and wide-field fluorescence microscopy to probe the interplay between local variations in charge carrier recombination and charge carrier transport in methylammonium lead triiodide perovskite thin films. We find that local photoluminescence variations present in confocal imaging are also observed in wide-field imaging, while intensity-dependent confocal measurements show that the heterogeneity in nonradiative losses observed at low excitation powers becomes less pronounced at higher excitation powers. Both confocal and wide-field images show that carriers undergo anisotropic diffusion due to differences in intergrain connectivity. These data are all qualitatively consistent with trap-dominated variations in local photoluminescence intensity and with grain boundaries that exhibit varying degrees of opacity to carrier transport. We use a two-dimensional kinetic model to simulate and compare confocal time-resolved photoluminescence decay traces with experimental data. The simulations further support the assignment of local variations in nonradiative recombination as the primary cause of photoluminescence heterogeneity in the films studied herein. These results point to surface passivation and intergrain connectivity as areas that could yield improvements in perovskite solar cells and optoelectronic device performance.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017

Electrical Detection of Quantum Dot Hot Electrons Generated via a Mn2+-Enhanced Auger Process

Charles J. Barrows; Jeffrey D. Rinehart; Hirokazu Nagaoka; Dane W. deQuilettes; Michael Salvador; Jennifer I. L. Chen; David S. Ginger; Daniel R. Gamelin

An all-solid-state quantum-dot-based photon-to-current conversion device is demonstrated that selectively detects the generation of hot electrons. Photoexcitation of Mn2+-doped CdS quantum dots embedded in the device is followed by efficient picosecond energy transfer to Mn2+ with a long-lived (millisecond) excited-state lifetime. Electrons injected into the QDs under applied bias then capture this energy via Auger de-excitation, generating hot electrons that possess sufficient energy to escape over a ZnS blocking layer, thereby producing current. This electrically detected hot-electron generation is correlated with a quench in the steady-state Mn2+ luminescence and the introduction of a new nonradiative excited-state decay process, consistent with electron-dopant Auger cross-relaxation. The devices efficiency at detecting hot-electron generation provides a model platform for the study of hot-electron ionization relevant to the development of novel photodetectors and alternative energy-conversion devices.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018

The Role of Excitation Energy in Photobrightening and Photodegradation of Halide Perovskite Thin Films.

Wolf-Alexander Quitsch; Dane W. deQuilettes; Oliver Pfingsten; Alexander Schmitz; Stevan M. Ognjanović; Sarthak Jariwala; Susanne Koch; Markus Winterer; David S. Ginger; G. Bacher

We study the impact of excitation energy on the photostability of methylammonium lead triiodide (CH3NH3PbI3 or MAPI) perovskite thin films. Light soaking leads to a transient increase of the photoluminescence efficiency at excitation wavelengths longer than 520 nm, whereas light-induced degradation occurs when exciting the films with wavelengths shorter than 520 nm. X-ray diffraction and extinction measurements reveal the light-induced decomposition of CH3NH3PbI3 to lead iodide (PbI2) for the high-energy excitation regime. We propose a model explaining the energy dependence of the photostability that involves the photoexcitation of residual PbI2 species in the perovskite triggering the decomposition of CH3NH3PbI3.


ACS Nano | 2015

The importance of moisture in hybrid lead halide perovskite thin film fabrication

Giles E. Eperon; Severin N. Habisreutinger; Tomas Leijtens; Bardo J. Bruijnaers; Jacobus J. van Franeker; Dane W. deQuilettes; Sandeep Pathak; Rebecca J. Sutton; Giulia Grancini; David S. Ginger; René A. J. Janssen; Annamaria Petrozza; Henry J. Snaith


Advanced Energy Materials | 2014

A General Route to Enhance Polymer Solar Cell Performance using Plasmonic Nanoprisms

Kai Yao; Michael Salvador; Chu-Chen Chueh; Xu‐Kai Xin; Yun-Xiang Xu; Dane W. deQuilettes; Ting Hu; Yiwang Chen; David S. Ginger; Alex K.-Y. Jen

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Mark E. Ziffer

University of Washington

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Sven Burke

University of Washington

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Chu-Chen Chueh

University of Washington

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Susanne Koch

University of Washington

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