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Dive into the research topics where Darcy D. Wanger is active.

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Featured researches published by Darcy D. Wanger.


ACS Nano | 2010

Colloidal PbS quantum dot solar cells with high fill factor.

Ni Zhao; Tim P. Osedach; Liang-Yi Chang; Scott M. Geyer; Darcy D. Wanger; Maddalena Binda; Alexi C. Arango; Moungi G. Bawendi; Vladimir Bulovic

We fabricate PbS colloidal quantum dot (QD)-based solar cells using a fullerene derivative as the electron-transporting layer (ETL). A thiol treatment and oxidation process are used to modify the morphology and electronic structure of the QD films, resulting in devices that exhibit a fill factor (FF) as high as 62%. We also show that, for QDs with a band gap of less than 1 eV, an open-circuit voltage (VOC) of 0.47 V can be achieved. The power conversion efficiency reaches 1.3% under 1 sun AM1.5 test conditions and 2.4% under monochromatic infrared (lambda=1310 nm) illumination. A consistent mechanism for device operation is developed through a circuit model and experimental measurements, shedding light on new approaches for optimization of solar cell performance by modifying the interface between the QDs and the neighboring charge transport layers.


Nano Letters | 2011

Improved Current Extraction from ZnO/PbS Quantum Dot Heterojunction Photovoltaics Using a MoO3 Interfacial Layer

Patrick R. Brown; Richard R. Lunt; Ni Zhao; Timothy P. Osedach; Darcy D. Wanger; Liang Yi Chang; Moungi G. Bawendi; Vladimir Bulovic

The ability to engineer interfacial energy offsets in photovoltaic devices is one of the keys to their optimization. Here, we demonstrate that improvements in power conversion efficiency may be attained for ZnO/PbS heterojunction quantum dot photovoltaics through the incorporation of a MoO(3) interlayer between the PbS colloidal quantum dot film and the top-contact anode. Through a combination of current-voltage characterization, circuit modeling, Mott-Schottky analysis, and external quantum efficiency measurements performed with bottom- and top-illumination, these enhancements are shown to stem from the elimination of a reverse-bias Schottky diode present at the PbS/anode interface. The incorporation of the high-work-function MoO(3) layer pins the Fermi level of the top contact, effectively decoupling the device performance from the work function of the anode and resulting in a high open-circuit voltage (0.59 ± 0.01 V) for a range of different anode materials. Corresponding increases in short-circuit current and fill factor enable 1.5-fold, 2.3-fold, and 4.5-fold enhancements in photovoltaic device efficiency for gold, silver, and ITO anodes, respectively, and result in a power conversion efficiency of 3.5 ± 0.4% for a device employing a gold anode.


ACS Nano | 2012

Bias-Stress Effect in 1,2-Ethanedithiol-Treated PbS Quantum Dot Field-Effect Transistors

Timothy P. Osedach; Ni Zhao; Trisha L. Andrew; Patrick R. Brown; Darcy D. Wanger; David B. Strasfeld; Liang-Yi Chang; Moungi G. Bawendi; Vladimir Bulovic

We investigate the bias-stress effect in field-effect transistors (FETs) consisting of 1,2-ethanedithiol-treated PbS quantum dot (QD) films as charge transport layers in a top-gated configuration. The FETs exhibit ambipolar operation with typical mobilities on the order of μ(e) = 8 × 10(-3) cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) in n-channel operation and μ(h) = 1 × 10(-3) cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) in p-channel operation. When the FET is turned on in n-channel or p-channel mode, the established drain-source current rapidly decreases from its initial magnitude in a stretched exponential decay, manifesting the bias-stress effect. The choice of dielectric is found to have little effect on the characteristics of this bias-stress effect, leading us to conclude that the associated charge-trapping process originates within the QD film itself. Measurements of bias-stress-induced time-dependent decays in the drain-source current (I(DS)) are well fit to stretched exponential functions, and the time constants of these decays in n-channel and p-channel operation are found to follow thermally activated (Arrhenius) behavior. Measurements as a function of QD size reveal that the stressing process in n-channel operation is faster for QDs of a smaller diameter while stress in p-channel operation is found to be relatively invariant to QD size. Our results are consistent with a mechanism in which field-induced nanoscale morphological changes within the QD film result in screening of the applied gate field. This phenomenon is entirely recoverable, which allows us to repeatedly observe bias stress and recovery characteristics on the same device. This work elucidates aspects of charge transport in chemically treated lead chalcogenide QD films and is of relevance to ongoing investigations toward employing these films in optoelectronic devices.


Nature Chemistry | 2013

Direct probe of spectral inhomogeneity reveals synthetic tunability of single-nanocrystal spectral linewidths

Jian Cui; Andrew P. Beyler; Lisa F. Marshall; Ou Chen; Daniel K. Harris; Darcy D. Wanger; Xavier Brokmann; Moungi G. Bawendi

The spectral linewidth of an ensemble of fluorescent emitters is dictated by the combination of single-emitter linewidths and sample inhomogeneity. For semiconductor nanocrystals, efforts to tune ensemble linewidths for optical applications have focused primarily on eliminating sample inhomogeneities, because conventional single-molecule methods cannot reliably build accurate ensemble-level statistics for single-particle linewidths. Photon-correlation Fourier spectroscopy in solution (S-PCFS) offers a unique approach to investigating single-nanocrystal spectra with large sample statistics and high signal-to-noise ratios, without user selection bias and at fast timescales. With S-PCFS, we directly and quantitatively deconstruct the ensemble linewidth into contributions from the average single-particle linewidth and from sample inhomogeneity. We demonstrate that single-particle linewidths vary significantly from batch to batch and can be synthetically controlled. These findings delineate the synthetic challenges facing underdeveloped nanomaterials such as InP and InAs core-shell particles and introduce new avenues for the synthetic optimization of fluorescent nanoparticles.


Advanced Materials | 2010

Interfacial Recombination for Fast Operation of a Planar Organic/QD Infrared Photodetector

Timothy P. Osedach; Ni Zhao; Scott M. Geyer; Liang-Yi Chang; Darcy D. Wanger; Alexi C. Arango; Moungi C. Bawendi; Vladimir Bulovic

Thin fi lms of organic semiconductors and colloidal nanocrystal quantum dots (QDs) have attracted considerable interest for a variety of electronic device applications due to the tunability of their electronic structure as well as the potential for scalable device fabrication across large-area substrates. QDs are especially interesting due to the freedom available to directly engineer their optoelectronic properties by varying the nanocrystal size [ 1 ] as well as by chemically modifying QD surfaces with oxidation [ 2 , 3 ] or ligand exchange. [ 4–9 ] Of particular interest is the prospect for QD optical response that extends into the short-wavelength infrared (SWIR) part of the spectrum (wavelengths of λ = 1.0 μ m to 2.0 μ m) with QDs of low-bandgap semiconductors such as PbS and PbSe. This wavelength range is largely inaccessible to organic materials yet is critical to effi cient photovoltaics, [ 10 ] night vision, [ 11 , 12 ] biological imaging applications, [ 13 , 14 ] and optical communication. [ 15 , 16 ]


Nano Letters | 2012

Nanopatterned Electrically Conductive Films of Semiconductor Nanocrystals

Tamar Mentzel; Darcy D. Wanger; Nirat Ray; Brian J. Walker; David B. Strasfeld; Moungi G. Bawendi; M. A. Kastner

We present the first semiconductor nanocrystal films of nanoscale dimensions that are electrically conductive and crack-free. These films make it possible to study the electrical properties intrinsic to the nanocrystals unimpeded by defects such as cracking and clustering that typically exist in larger-scale films. We find that the electrical conductivity of the nanoscale films is 180 times higher than that of drop-cast, microscopic films made of the same type of nanocrystal. Our technique for forming the nanoscale films is based on electron-beam lithography and a lift-off process. The patterns have dimensions as small as 30 nm and are positioned on a surface with 30 nm precision. The method is flexible in the choice of nanocrystal core-shell materials and ligands. We demonstrate patterns with PbS, PbSe, and CdSe cores and Zn(0.5)Cd(0.5)Se-Zn(0.5)Cd(0.5)S core-shell nanocrystals with a variety of ligands. We achieve unprecedented versatility in integrating semiconductor nanocrystal films into device structures both for studying the intrinsic electrical properties of the nanocrystals and for nanoscale optoelectronic applications.


Nano Letters | 2013

The Dominant Role of Exciton Quenching in PbS Quantum-Dot-Based Photovoltaic Devices

Darcy D. Wanger; Raoul E. Correa; Eric A. Dauler; Moungi G. Bawendi

We present a quantitative measurement of the number of trapped carriers combined with a measurement of exciton quenching to assess limiting mechanisms for current losses in PbS-quantum-dot-based photovoltaic devices. We use photocurrent intensity dependence and short-wave infrared transient photoluminescence and correlate these with device performance. We find that the effective density of trapped carriers ranges from 1 in 10 to 1 in 10,000 quantum dots, depending on ligand treatment, and that nonradiative exciton quenching, as opposed to recombination with trapped carriers, is likely the limiting mechanism in these devices.


Nano Letters | 2012

Imaging Schottky barriers and ohmic contacts in PbS quantum dot devices.

David B. Strasfeld; August Dorn; Darcy D. Wanger; Moungi G. Bawendi

We fabricated planar PbS quantum dot devices with ohmic and Schottky type electrodes and characterized them using scanning photocurrent and photovoltage microscopies. The microscopy techniques used in this investigation allow for interrogation of the lateral depletion width and related photovoltaic properties in the planar Schottky type contacts. Titanium/QD contacts exhibited depletion widths that varied over a wide range as a function of bias voltage, while the gold/QD contacts showed ohmic behavior over the same voltage range.


Nanotechnology | 2013

Controlled placement of colloidal quantum dots in sub-15 nm clusters

Vitor R. Manfrinato; Darcy D. Wanger; David B. Strasfeld; Hee Sun Han; Francesco Marsili; Jose Arrieta; Tamar Mentzel; Moungi G. Bawendi; Karl K. Berggren


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014

Measuring charge transport in nanopatterned PbS colloidal quantum dots using charge sensing

Nirat Ray; Neal Staley; Darcy D. Wanger; Moungi G. Bawendi; M. A. Kastner

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M. A. Kastner

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Tamar Mentzel

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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David B. Strasfeld

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Nirat Ray

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Vladimir Bulovic

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Ni Zhao

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Liang-Yi Chang

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Alexi C. Arango

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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