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Dive into the research topics where Erin L. Ratcliff is active.

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Featured researches published by Erin L. Ratcliff.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2011

Selective Interlayers and Contacts in Organic Photovoltaic Cells

Erin L. Ratcliff; Brian Zacher; Neal R. Armstrong

Organic photovoltaic cells (OPVs) are promising solar electric energy conversion systems with impressive recent optimization of active layers. OPV optimization must now be accompanied by the development of new charge-selective contacts and interlayers. This Perspective considers the role of interface science in energy harvesting using OPVs, looking back at early photoelectrochemical (photogalvanic) energy conversion platforms, which suffered from a lack of charge carrier selectivity. We then examine recent platforms and the fundamental aspects of selective harvesting of holes and electrons at opposite contacts. For blended heterojunction OPVs, contact/interlayer design is especially critical because charge harvesting competes with recombination at these same contacts. New interlayer materials can modify contacts to both control work function and introduce selectivity and chemical compatibility with nonpolar active layers and add thermodynamic and kinetic selectivity to charge harvesting. We briefly discuss the surface and interface science required for the development of new interlayer materials and take a look ahead at the challenges yet to be faced in their optimization.


ACS Nano | 2009

Colloidal Polymerization of Polymer- Coated Ferromagnetic Nanoparticles into Cobalt Oxide Nanowires

Pei Yuin Keng; Bo Yun Kim; In Bo Shim; Rabindra Sahoo; Peter E. Veneman; Neal R. Armstrong; Heemin Yoo; Jeanne E. Pemberton; Mathew M. Bull; Jared J. Griebel; Erin L. Ratcliff; Kenneth G. Nebesny; Jeffrey Pyun

The preparation of polystyrene-coated cobalt oxide nanowires is reported via the colloidal polymerization of polymer-coated ferromagnetic cobalt nanoparticles (PS-CoNPs). Using a combination of dipolar nanoparticle assembly and a solution oxidation of preorganized metallic colloids, interconnected nanoparticles of cobalt oxide spanning micrometers in length were prepared. The colloidal polymerization of PS-CoNPs into cobalt oxide (CoO and Co(3)O(4)) nanowires was achieved by bubbling O(2) into PS-CoNP dispersions in 1,2-dichlorobenzene at 175 degrees C. Calcination of thin films of PS-coated cobalt oxide nanowires afforded Co(3)O(4) metal oxide materials. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) revealed the formation of interconnected nanoparticles of cobalt oxide with hollow inclusions, arising from a combination of dipolar assembly of PS-CoNPs and the nanoscale Kirkendall effect in the oxidation reaction. Using a wide range of spectroscopic and electrochemical characterization techniques, we demonstrate that cobalt oxide nanowires prepared via this novel methodology were electroactive with potential applications as nanostructured electrodes for energy storage.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Improvement of interfacial contacts for new small-molecule bulk-heterojunction organic photovoltaics.

Andres Garcia; Gregory C. Welch; Erin L. Ratcliff; David S. Ginley; Guillermo C. Bazan; Dana C. Olson

The influence of protonation reactions between poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS) and a thiadiazolo[3,4-c]pyridine small-molecule donor are reported; these result in poor solar-cell performance due to a barrier for charge extraction. The use of a NiO(x) contact eliminates such deleterious chemical interactions and results in substantial improvements in open-circuit voltage, fill factor, and an increased power conversion efficiency from 2.3% to 5.1%.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Influence of backbone fluorination in regioregular poly(3-alkyl-4-fluoro)thiophenes.

Zhuping Fei; Pierre Boufflet; Sebastian Wood; Jessica Wade; John Moriarty; Eliot Gann; Erin L. Ratcliff; Christopher R. McNeill; Henning Sirringhaus; Ji-Seon Kim; Martin Heeney

We report two strategies toward the synthesis of 3-alkyl-4-fluorothiophenes containing straight (hexyl and octyl) and branched (2-ethylhexyl) alkyl groups. We demonstrate that treatment of the dibrominated monomer with 1 equiv of alkyl Grignard reagent leads to the formation of a single regioisomer as a result of the pronounced directing effect of the fluorine group. Polymerization of the resulting species affords highly regioregular poly(3-alkyl-4-fluoro)thiophenes. Comparison of their properties to those of the analogous non-fluorinated polymers shows that backbone fluorination leads to an increase in the polymer ionization potential without a significant change in optical band gap. Fluorination also results in an enhanced tendency to aggregate in solution, which is ascribed to a more co-planar backbone on the basis of Raman and DFT calculations. Average charge carrier mobilities in field-effect transistors are found to increase by up to a factor of 5 for the fluorinated polymers.


Langmuir | 2010

Ferrocene Functional Polymer Brushes on Indium Tin Oxide via Surface-Initiated Atom Transfer Radical Polymerization

Bo Yun Kim; Erin L. Ratcliff; Neal R. Armstrong; Tomasz Kowalewski; Jeffrey Pyun

The synthesis and electrochemical characterization of ferrocene functional polymethacrylate brushes on indium tin oxide (ITO) electrodes using surface-initiated atom transfer radical polymerization (SI-ATRP) is reported. SI-ATRP of ferrocene-containing methacrylate (FcMA) monomers from a phosphonic acid initiator-modified ITO substrate yielded well-defined homo- and block (co)polymer brushes of varying molar mass (4,000 to 37,000 g/mol). Correlation of both electrochemical properties and brush thicknesses confirmed controlled SI-ATRP from modified ITO surfaces. The preparation of block copolymer brushes with varying sequences of FcMA segments was conducted to interrogate the effects of spacing from the ITO electrode surface on the electrochemical properties of a tethered electroactive film.


Langmuir | 2013

Orientation of phenylphosphonic acid self-assembled monolayers on a transparent conductive oxide: a combined NEXAFS, PM-IRRAS, and DFT study.

Matthew Gliboff; Lingzi Sang; Kristina M. Knesting; Matthew C. Schalnat; Anoma Mudalige; Erin L. Ratcliff; Hong Li; Ajaya K. Sigdel; Anthony J. Giordano; Joseph J. Berry; Dennis Nordlund; Gerald T. Seidler; Jean-Luc Brédas; Seth R. Marder; Jeanne E. Pemberton; David S. Ginger

Self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of dipolar phosphonic acids can tailor the interface between organic semiconductors and transparent conductive oxides. When used in optoelectronic devices such as organic light emitting diodes and solar cells, these SAMs can increase current density and photovoltaic performance. The molecular ordering and conformation adopted by the SAMs determine properties such as work function and wettability at these critical interfaces. We combine angle-dependent near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) spectroscopy and polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS) to determine the molecular orientations of a model phenylphosphonic acid on indium zinc oxide, and correlate the resulting values with density functional theory (DFT). We find that the SAMs are surprisingly well-oriented, with the phenyl ring adopting a well-defined tilt angle of 12-16° from the surface normal. We find quantitative agreement between the two experimental techniques and density functional theory calculations. These results not only provide a detailed picture of the molecular structure of a technologically important class of SAMs, but also resolve a long-standing ambiguity regarding the vibrational-mode assignments for phosphonic acids on oxide surfaces, thus improving the utility of PM-IRRAS for future studies.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2012

Built-In Potential in Conjugated Polymer Diodes with Changing Anode Work Function: Interfacial States and Deviation from the Schottky-Mott Limit.

Bradley A. MacLeod; Noah Elliott Horwitz; Erin L. Ratcliff; Judith L. Jenkins; Neal R. Armstrong; Anthony J. Giordano; Peter J. Hotchkiss; Seth R. Marder; Charles T. Campbell; David S. Ginger

We use electroabsorption spectroscopy to measure the change in built-in potential (VBI) across the polymer photoactive layer in diodes where indium tin oxide electrodes are systematically modified using dipolar phosphonic acid self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) with various dipole moments. We find that VBI scales linearly with the work function (Φ) of the SAM-modified electrode over a wide range when using a solution-coated poly(p-phenylenevinylene) derivative as the active layer. However, we measure an interfacial parameter of S = eΔVBI/ΔΦ < 1, suggesting that these ITO/SAM/polymer interfaces deviate from the Schottky-Mott limit, in contrast to what has previously been reported for a number of ambient-processed organic-on-electrode systems. Our results suggest that the energetics at these ITO/SAM/polymer interfaces behave more like metal/organic interfaces previously studied in UHV despite being processed from solution.


Langmuir | 2011

Phosphonic Acid Functionalized Asymmetric Phthalocyanines: Synthesis, Modification of Indium Tin Oxide, and Charge Transfer

Nathan W. Polaske; Hsiao Chu Lin; Anna Tang; Mayunk Mayukh; Luis E. Oquendo; John T. Green; Erin L. Ratcliff; Neal R. Armstrong; S. Scott Saavedra; Dominic V. McGrath

Metalated and free-base A(3)B-type asymmetric phthalocyanines (Pcs) bearing, in the asymmetric quadrant, a flexible alkyl linker of varying chain lengths terminating in a phosphonic acid (PA) group have been synthesized. Two parallel series of asymmetric Pc derivatives bearing aryloxy and arylthio substituents are reported, and their synthesis and characterization through NMR, combustion analysis, and MALDI-MS are described. We also demonstrate the modification of indium tin oxide (ITO) substrates using the PA functionalized asymmetric Pc derivatives and monitoring their electrochemistry. The PA functionalized asymmetric Pcs were anchored to the ITO surface through chemisorption and their electrochemical properties characterized using cyclic voltammetry to investigate the effects of PA structure on the thermodynamics and kinetics of charge transfer. Ionization energies of the modified ITO surfaces were measured using ultraviolet photoemission spectroscopy.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2012

Electron-transfer processes in zinc phthalocyanine-phosphonic acid monolayers on ITO: Characterization of orientation and charge-transfer kinetics by waveguide spectroelectrochemistry

Hsiao Chu Lin; Nathan W. Polaske; Luis E. Oquendo; Matthew Gliboff; Kristina M. Knesting; Dennis Nordlund; David S. Ginger; Erin L. Ratcliff; Brooke M. Beam; Neal R. Armstrong; Dominic V. McGrath; S. Scott Saavedra

Using a monolayer of zinc phthalocyanine (ZnPcPA) tethered to indium tin oxide (ITO) as a model for the donor/transparent conducting oxide (TCO) interface in organic photovoltaics (OPVs), we demonstrate the relationship between molecular orientation and charge-transfer rates using spectroscopic, electrochemical, and spectroelectrochemical methods. Both monomeric and aggregated forms of the phthalocyanine (Pc) are observed in ZnPcPA monolayers. Potential-modulated attenuated total reflectance (PM-ATR) measurements show that the monomeric subpopulation undergoes oxidation/reduction with ks,app = 2 × 10(2) s(-1), independent of Pc orientation. For the aggregated ZnPcPA, faster orientation-dependent charge-transfer rates are observed. For in-plane-oriented Pc aggregates, ks,app = 2 × 10(3) s(-1), whereas for upright Pc aggregates, ks,app = 7 × 10(2) s(-1). The rates for the aggregates are comparable to those required for redox-active interlayer films at the hole-collection contact in organic solar cells.


Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2013

Formation of interfacial traps upon surface protonation in small molecule solution processed bulk heterojunctions probed by photoelectron spectroscopy

Erin L. Ratcliff; Ronald C. Bakus; Gregory C. Welch; Tom S. van der Poll; Andres Garcia; Sarah R. Cowan; Bradley A. MacLeod; David S. Ginley; Guillermo C. Bazan; Dana C. Olson

This work expands on the recently reported protonation of the donor molecule 7,7′-(4,4-bis(2-ethylhexyl)-4H-silolo[3,2-b:4,5-b′]dithiophene-2,6-diyl)bis(4-(5′-hexyl-[2,2′-bithiophen]-5-yl)-[1,2,5]thiadiazolo[3,4-c]pyridine) (d-DTS(PTTh2)2) by the poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS) interlayer to include an electrostatic picture of interfacial energetic states. Ultraviolet photoemission spectroscopy results initially suggested favorable band level alignment for hole extraction between d-DTS(PTTh2)2 and PEDOT:PSS. However photovoltaic device performance yields a low fill factor and photovoltage, indicative of poor hole-extraction at the hole-collecting interface, relative to the nickel oxide device. Further investigation into the interfacial composition via theory and X-ray photoelectron studies of both the interface and a control system of d-DTS(PTTh2)2 reacted with p-toluenesulfonic acid verify the presence of a chemically unique species at the interface arising from protonation reaction with the residual acidic protons present in PEDOT:PSS that was masked in the UPS experiment. From these results, the energy band diagram is re-interpreted to account for the interfacial chemical reaction and modified interfacial density of states. Additionally, the detrimental protonation reaction is avoided when the pyridyl[1,2,5]thiadiazole acceptor unit was replaced with a 5-fluorobenzo[c][1,2,5]thiadiazole acceptor unit, which shows no such reaction with the PEDOT:PSS substrate. These results indicate the necessity of using a large analytical toolkit to elucidate the energetics and mechanisms of buried interfaces that will impact dynamics of hole collection.

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Dana C. Olson

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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David S. Ginley

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Joseph J. Berry

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Andres Garcia

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Seth R. Marder

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Ajaya K. Sigdel

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Anthony J. Giordano

Georgia Institute of Technology

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K. Xerxes Steirer

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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