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Dive into the research topics where David T. Moore is active.

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Featured researches published by David T. Moore.


Nature Communications | 2015

Ultrasmooth organic–inorganic perovskite thin-film formation and crystallization for efficient planar heterojunction solar cells

Wei Zhang; Michael Saliba; David T. Moore; Sandeep Pathak; Maximilian T. Hörantner; Thomas Stergiopoulos; Samuel D. Stranks; Giles E. Eperon; Jack A. Alexander-Webber; Antonio Abate; Aditya Sadhanala; Shuhua Yao; Yulin Chen; Richard H. Friend; Lara A. Estroff; Ulrich Wiesner; Henry J. Snaith

To date, there have been a plethora of reports on different means to fabricate organic-inorganic metal halide perovskite thin films; however, the inorganic starting materials have been limited to halide-based anions. Here we study the role of the anions in the perovskite solution and their influence upon perovskite crystal growth, film formation and device performance. We find that by using a non-halide lead source (lead acetate) instead of lead chloride or iodide, the perovskite crystal growth is much faster, which allows us to obtain ultrasmooth and almost pinhole-free perovskite films by a simple one-step solution coating with only a few minutes annealing. This synthesis leads to improved device performance in planar heterojunction architectures and answers a critical question as to the role of the anion and excess organic component during crystallization. Our work paves the way to tune the crystal growth kinetics by simple chemistry.


ACS Nano | 2014

Thermally Induced Structural Evolution and Performance of Mesoporous Block Copolymer-Directed Alumina Perovskite Solar Cells

Kwan Wee Tan; David T. Moore; Michael Saliba; Hiroaki Sai; Lara A. Estroff; Tobias Hanrath; Henry J. Snaith; Ulrich Wiesner

Structure control in solution-processed hybrid perovskites is crucial to design and fabricate highly efficient solar cells. Here, we utilize in situ grazing incidence wide-angle X-ray scattering and scanning electron microscopy to investigate the structural evolution and film morphologies of methylammonium lead tri-iodide/chloride (CH3NH3PbI3–xClx) in mesoporous block copolymer derived alumina superstructures during thermal annealing. We show the CH3NH3PbI3–xClx material evolution to be characterized by three distinct structures: a crystalline precursor structure not described previously, a 3D perovskite structure, and a mixture of compounds resulting from degradation. Finally, we demonstrate how understanding the processing parameters provides the foundation needed for optimal perovskite film morphology and coverage, leading to enhanced block copolymer-directed perovskite solar cell performance.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Crystallization Kinetics of Organic–Inorganic Trihalide Perovskites and the Role of the Lead Anion in Crystal Growth

David T. Moore; Hiroaki Sai; Kwan Wee Tan; Detlef-M. Smilgies; Wei Zhang; Henry J. Snaith; Ulrich Wiesner; Lara A. Estroff

Methylammonium lead halide perovskite solar cells continue to excite the research community due to their rapidly increasing performance which, in large part, is due to improvements in film morphology. The next step in this progression is control of the crystal morphology which requires a better fundamental understanding of the crystal growth. In this study we use in situ X-ray scattering data to study isothermal transformations of perovskite films derived from chloride, iodide, nitrate, and acetate lead salts. Using established models we determine the activation energy for crystallization and find that it changes as a function of the lead salt. Further analysis enabled determination of the precursor composition and showed that the primary step in perovskite formation is removal of excess organic salt from the precursor. This understanding suggests that careful choice of the lead salt will aid in controlling crystal growth, leading to superior films and better performing solar cells.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2017

A low viscosity, low boiling point, clean solvent system for the rapid crystallisation of highly specular perovskite films

Nakita K. Noel; Severin N. Habisreutinger; Bernard Wenger; Matthew T. Klug; Maximilian T. Hörantner; Michael B. Johnston; R. J. Nicholas; David T. Moore; Henry J. Snaith

Perovskite-based photovoltaics have, in recent years, become poised to revolutionise the solar industry. While there have been many approaches taken to the deposition of this material, one-step spin-coating remains the simplest and most widely used method in research laboratories. Although spin-coating is not recognised as the ideal manufacturing methodology, it represents a starting point from which more scalable deposition methods, such as slot-dye coating or ink-jet printing can be developed. Here, we introduce a new, low-boiling point, low viscosity solvent system that enables rapid, room temperature crystallisation of methylammonium lead triiodide perovskite films, without the use of strongly coordinating aprotic solvents. Through the use of this solvent, we produce dense, pinhole free films with uniform coverage, high specularity, and enhanced optoelectronic properties. We fabricate devices and achieve stabilised power conversion efficiencies of over 18% for films which have been annealed at 100 °C, and over 17% for films which have been dried under vacuum and have undergone no thermal processing. This deposition technique allows uniform coating on substrate areas of up to 125 cm2, showing tremendous promise for the fabrication of large area, high efficiency, solution processed devices, and represents a critical step towards industrial upscaling and large area printing of perovskite solar cells.


Nano Letters | 2012

Submicrosecond time resolution atomic force microscopy for probing nanoscale dynamics.

Rajiv Giridharagopal; Glennis E. Rayermann; Guozheng Shao; David T. Moore; Obadiah G. Reid; Andreas F. Tillack; David J. Masiello; David S. Ginger

We propose, simulate, and experimentally validate a new mechanical detection method to analyze atomic force microscopy (AFM) cantilever motion that enables noncontact discrimination of transient events with ~100 ns temporal resolution without the need for custom AFM probes, specialized instrumentation, or expensive add-on hardware. As an example application, we use the method to screen thermally annealed poly(3-hexylthiophene):phenyl-C(61)-butyric acid methyl ester photovoltaic devices under realistic testing conditions over a technologically relevant performance window. We show that variations in device efficiency and nanoscale transient charging behavior are correlated, thereby linking local dynamics with device behavior. We anticipate that this method will find application in scanning probe experiments of dynamic local mechanical, electronic, magnetic, and biophysical phenomena.


Nature Communications | 2016

Mechanism for rapid growth of organic–inorganic halide perovskite crystals

Pabitra K. Nayak; David T. Moore; Bernard Wenger; Simantini Nayak; Amir A. Haghighirad; Adam Fineberg; Nakita K. Noel; Obadiah G. Reid; Garry Rumbles; Philipp Kukura; Kylie A. Vincent; Henry J. Snaith

Optoelectronic devices based on hybrid halide perovskites have shown remarkable progress to high performance. However, despite their apparent success, there remain many open questions about their intrinsic properties. Single crystals are often seen as the ideal platform for understanding the limits of crystalline materials, and recent reports of rapid, high-temperature crystallization of single crystals should enable a variety of studies. Here we explore the mechanism of this crystallization and find that it is due to reversible changes in the solution where breaking up of colloids, and a change in the solvent strength, leads to supersaturation and subsequent crystallization. We use this knowledge to demonstrate a broader range of processing parameters and show that these can lead to improved crystal quality. Our findings are therefore of central importance to enable the continued advancement of perovskite optoelectronics and to the improved reproducibility through a better understanding of factors influencing and controlling crystallization.


APL Materials | 2014

Impact of the organic halide salt on final perovskite composition for photovoltaic applications

David T. Moore; Hiroaki Sai; Kwan Wee Tan; Lara A. Estroff; Ulrich Wiesner

The methylammonium lead halide perovskites have shown significant promise as a low-cost, second generation, photovoltaic material. Despite recent advances, however, there are still a number of fundamental aspects of their formation as well as their physical and electronic behavior that are not well understood. In this letter we explore the mechanism by which these materials crystallize by testing the outcome of each of the reagent halide salts. We find that components of both salts, lead halide and methylammonium halide, are relatively mobile and can be readily exchanged during the crystallization process when the reaction is carried out in solution or in the solid state. We exploit this fact by showing that the perovskite structure is formed even when the lead salts anion is a non-halide, leading to lower annealing temperature and time requirements for film formation. Studies into these behaviors may ultimately lead to improved processing conditions for photovoltaic films.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Synthesis and Spectroscopy of Silver-Doped PbSe Quantum Dots

Daniel M. Kroupa; Barbara K. Hughes; Elisa M. Miller; David T. Moore; Nicholas C. Anderson; Boris D. Chernomordik; Arthur J. Nozik; Matthew C. Beard

Electronic impurity doping of bulk semiconductors is an essential component of semiconductor science and technology. Yet there are only a handful of studies demonstrating control of electronic impurities in semiconductor nanocrystals. Here, we studied electronic impurity doping of colloidal PbSe quantum dots (QDs) using a postsynthetic cation exchange reaction in which Pb is exchanged for Ag. We found that varying the concentration of dopants exposed to the as-synthesized PbSe QDs controls the extent of exchange. The electronic impurity doped QDs exhibit the fundamental spectroscopic signatures associated with injecting a free charge carrier into a QD under equilibrium conditions, including a bleach of the first exciton transition and the appearance of a quantum-confined, low-energy intraband absorption feature. Photoelectron spectroscopy confirms that Ag acts as a p-type dopant for PbSe QDs and infrared spectroscopy is consistent with k·p calculations of the size-dependent intraband transition energy. We find that to bleach the first exciton transition by an average of 1 carrier per QD requires that approximately 10% of the Pb be replaced by Ag. We hypothesize that the majority of incorporated Ag remains at the QD surface and does not interact with the core electronic states of the QD. Instead, the excess Ag at the surface promotes the incorporation of <1% Ag into the QD core where it causes p-type doping behavior.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2014

A detailed balance analysis of conversion efficiencies limits for nanocrystal solar cells—Relating the shape of the excitonic peak to conversion efficiencies

David T. Moore; Bernard Gaskey; Andrew Robbins; Tobias Hanrath

We report the detailed balance analysis of the photovoltaic conversion efficiency of nanocrystal solar cells with discrete excitonic absorption profiles. We calculated the conversion efficiency limits of single junction, multiexciton, and tandem solar cells as a function of exciton peak energy and width. We delineate the width of the absorption spectrum in terms of the energetic width of an isolated nanocrystal and the physical width due to the nanocrystal diameter distribution in the ensemble. Our results suggest that the conversion efficiency is less strongly impacted by the ensemble distribution than by the energetic peak width.


Advanced Energy Materials | 2016

Bandgap-Tunable Cesium Lead Halide Perovskites with High Thermal Stability for Efficient Solar Cells

Rebecca J. Sutton; Giles E. Eperon; Laura Miranda; Elizabeth S. Parrott; Jay B. Patel; Maximilian T. Hörantner; Michael B. Johnston; Amir A. Haghighirad; David T. Moore; Henry J. Snaith

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Jos Oomens

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Robert C. Dunbar

Case Western Reserve University

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Obadiah G. Reid

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Wei Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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