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Dive into the research topics where F. Pelayo García de Arquer is active.

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Featured researches published by F. Pelayo García de Arquer.


Science | 2017

Efficient and stable solution-processed planar perovskite solar cells via contact passivation

Hairen Tan; Ankit Jain; Oleksandr Voznyy; Xinzheng Lan; F. Pelayo García de Arquer; James Z. Fan; Rafael Quintero-Bermudez; Mingjian Yuan; Bo Zhang; Yicheng Zhao; Fengjia Fan; Peicheng Li; Li Na Quan; Yongbiao Zhao; Zheng-Hong Lu; Zhenyu Yang; Sjoerd Hoogland; Edward H. Sargent

Passivating traps in perovskites Low-temperature processing of planar organic-inorganic perovskite solar cells made through solution processing would allow for simpler manufacturing and the use of flexible substrates. However, materials currently in use form interfaces with charge carrier trap states that limit performance. Tan et al. used chlorine-capped TiO2 colloidal nanocrystal films as an electron-selective layer, which limited interface recombination in solution-processed solar cells. Such cells achieved certified efficiencies of 19.5% for active areas of 1.1 cm2. Science, this issue p. 722 Chlorine-capped TiO2 nanocrystal films processed below 150°C effectively passivate detrimental carrier trap states. Planar perovskite solar cells (PSCs) made entirely via solution processing at low temperatures (<150°C) offer promise for simple manufacturing, compatibility with flexible substrates, and perovskite-based tandem devices. However, these PSCs require an electron-selective layer that performs well with similar processing. We report a contact-passivation strategy using chlorine-capped TiO2 colloidal nanocrystal film that mitigates interfacial recombination and improves interface binding in low-temperature planar solar cells. We fabricated solar cells with certified efficiencies of 20.1 and 19.5% for active areas of 0.049 and 1.1 square centimeters, respectively, achieved via low-temperature solution processing. Solar cells with efficiency greater than 20% retained 90% (97% after dark recovery) of their initial performance after 500 hours of continuous room-temperature operation at their maximum power point under 1-sun illumination (where 1 sun is defined as the standard illumination at AM1.5, or 1 kilowatt/square meter).


Science | 2016

Homogeneously dispersed, multimetal oxygen-evolving catalysts

Bo Zhang; Xueli Zheng; Oleksandr Voznyy; Riccardo Comin; Michal Bajdich; Max García-Melchor; Lili Han; Jixian Xu; Min Liu; Lirong Zheng; F. Pelayo García de Arquer; Cao Thang Dinh; Fengjia Fan; Mingjian Yuan; Emre Yassitepe; Ning Chen; Tom Regier; Peng Fei Liu; Yuhang Li; Phil De Luna; Alyf Janmohamed; Huolin L. Xin; Hua Gui Yang; Aleksandra Vojvodic; Edward H. Sargent

Modulating metal oxides The more difficult step in fuel cells and water electrolysis is the oxygen evolution reaction. The search for earth-abundant materials to replace noble metals for this reaction often turns to oxides of three-dimensional metals such as iron. Zhang et al. show that the applied voltages needed to drive this reaction are reduced for iron-cobalt oxides by the addition of tungsten. The addition of tungsten favorably modulates the electronic structure of the oxyhydroxide. A key development is to keep the metals well mixed and avoid the formation of separate phases. Science, this issue p. 333 The addition of tungsten to iron cobalt oxides lowers the overpotential required for the evolution of oxygen from water. Earth-abundant first-row (3d) transition metal–based catalysts have been developed for the oxygen-evolution reaction (OER); however, they operate at overpotentials substantially above thermodynamic requirements. Density functional theory suggested that non-3d high-valency metals such as tungsten can modulate 3d metal oxides, providing near-optimal adsorption energies for OER intermediates. We developed a room-temperature synthesis to produce gelled oxyhydroxides materials with an atomically homogeneous metal distribution. These gelled FeCoW oxyhydroxides exhibit the lowest overpotential (191 millivolts) reported at 10 milliamperes per square centimeter in alkaline electrolyte. The catalyst shows no evidence of degradation after more than 500 hours of operation. X-ray absorption and computational studies reveal a synergistic interplay between tungsten, iron, and cobalt in producing a favorable local coordination environment and electronic structure that enhance the energetics for OER.


Nature | 2016

Enhanced electrocatalytic CO2 reduction via field-induced reagent concentration

Min Liu; Yuanjie Pang; Bo Zhang; Phil De Luna; Oleksandr Voznyy; Jixian Xu; Xueli Zheng; Cao Thang Dinh; Fengjia Fan; Changhong Cao; F. Pelayo García de Arquer; Tina Saberi Safaei; Adam Mepham; Anna Klinkova; Eugenia Kumacheva; Tobin Filleter; David Sinton; Shana O. Kelley; Edward H. Sargent

Electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2) to carbon monoxide (CO) is the first step in the synthesis of more complex carbon-based fuels and feedstocks using renewable electricity. Unfortunately, the reaction suffers from slow kinetics owing to the low local concentration of CO2 surrounding typical CO2 reduction reaction catalysts. Alkali metal cations are known to overcome this limitation through non-covalent interactions with adsorbed reagent species, but the effect is restricted by the solubility of relevant salts. Large applied electrode potentials can also enhance CO2 adsorption, but this comes at the cost of increased hydrogen (H2) evolution. Here we report that nanostructured electrodes produce, at low applied overpotentials, local high electric fields that concentrate electrolyte cations, which in turn leads to a high local concentration of CO2 close to the active CO2 reduction reaction surface. Simulations reveal tenfold higher electric fields associated with metallic nanometre-sized tips compared to quasi-planar electrode regions, and measurements using gold nanoneedles confirm a field-induced reagent concentration that enables the CO2 reduction reaction to proceed with a geometric current density for CO of 22 milliamperes per square centimetre at −0.35 volts (overpotential of 0.24 volts). This performance surpasses by an order of magnitude the performance of the best gold nanorods, nanoparticles and oxide-derived noble metal catalysts. Similarly designed palladium nanoneedle electrocatalysts produce formate with a Faradaic efficiency of more than 90 per cent and an unprecedented geometric current density for formate of 10 milliamperes per square centimetre at −0.2 volts, demonstrating the wider applicability of the field-induced reagent concentration concept.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Passivation Using Molecular Halides Increases Quantum Dot Solar Cell Performance.

Xinzheng Lan; Oleksandr Voznyy; Amirreza Kiani; F. Pelayo García de Arquer; Abdullah Saud Abbas; Gi-Hwan Kim; Mengxia Liu; Zhenyu Yang; Grant Walters; Jixian Xu; Mingjian Yuan; Zhijun Ning; Fengjia Fan; Pongsakorn Kanjanaboos; Illan J. Kramer; David Zhitomirsky; Philip Lee; Alexander Perelgut; Sjoerd Hoogland; Edward H. Sargent

A solution-based passivation scheme is developed featuring the use of molecular iodine and PbS colloidal quantum dots (CQDs). The improved passivation translates into a longer carrier diffusion length in the solid film. This allows thicker solar-cell devices to be built while preserving efficient charge collection, leading to a certified power conversion efficiency of 9.9%, which is a new record in CQD solar cells.


Nano Letters | 2016

10.6% Certified Colloidal Quantum Dot Solar Cells via Solvent-Polarity-Engineered Halide Passivation

Xinzheng Lan; Oleksandr Voznyy; F. Pelayo García de Arquer; Mengxia Liu; Jixian Xu; Andrew H. Proppe; Grant Walters; Fengjia Fan; Hairen Tan; Min Liu; Zhenyu Yang; Sjoerd Hoogland; Edward H. Sargent

Colloidal quantum dot (CQD) solar cells are solution-processed photovoltaics with broad spectral absorption tunability. Major advances in their efficiency have been made via improved CQD surface passivation and device architectures with enhanced charge carrier collection. Herein, we demonstrate a new strategy to improve further the passivation of CQDs starting from the solution phase. A cosolvent system is employed to tune the solvent polarity in order to achieve the solvation of methylammonium iodide (MAI) and the dispersion of hydrophobic PbS CQDs simultaneously in a homogeneous phase, otherwise not achieved in a single solvent. This process enables MAI to access the CQDs to confer improved passivation. This, in turn, allows for efficient charge extraction from a thicker photoactive layer device, leading to a certified solar cell power conversion efficiency of 10.6%, a new certified record in CQD photovoltaics.


Nature Materials | 2017

Hybrid organic–inorganic inks flatten the energy landscape in colloidal quantum dot solids

Mengxia Liu; Oleksandr Voznyy; Randy P. Sabatini; F. Pelayo García de Arquer; Rahim Munir; Ahmed H. Balawi; Xinzheng Lan; Fengjia Fan; Grant Walters; Ahmad R. Kirmani; Sjoerd Hoogland; Frédéric Laquai; Aram Amassian; Edward H. Sargent

Bandtail states in disordered semiconductor materials result in losses in open-circuit voltage (Voc) and inhibit carrier transport in photovoltaics. For colloidal quantum dot (CQD) films that promise low-cost, large-area, air-stable photovoltaics, bandtails are determined by CQD synthetic polydispersity and inhomogeneous aggregation during the ligand-exchange process. Here we introduce a new method for the synthesis of solution-phase ligand-exchanged CQD inks that enable a flat energy landscape and an advantageously high packing density. In the solid state, these materials exhibit a sharper bandtail and reduced energy funnelling compared with the previous best CQD thin films for photovoltaics. Consequently, we demonstrate solar cells with higher Voc and more efficient charge injection into the electron acceptor, allowing the use of a closer-to-optimum bandgap to absorb more light. These enable the fabrication of CQD solar cells made via a solution-phase ligand exchange, with a certified power conversion efficiency of 11.28%. The devices are stable when stored in air, unencapsulated, for over 1,000 h.


Nano Letters | 2015

High-Efficiency Colloidal Quantum Dot Photovoltaics via Robust Self-Assembled Monolayers

Gi-Hwan Kim; F. Pelayo García de Arquer; Yung Jin Yoon; Xinzheng Lan; Mengxia Liu; Oleksandr Voznyy; Zhenyu Yang; Fengjia Fan; Alexander H. Ip; Pongsakorn Kanjanaboos; Sjoerd Hoogland; Jin Young Kim; Edward H. Sargent

The optoelectronic tunability offered by colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) is attractive for photovoltaic applications but demands proper band alignment at electrodes for efficient charge extraction at minimal cost to voltage. With this goal in mind, self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) can be used to modify interface energy levels locally. However, to be effective SAMs must be made robust to treatment using the various solvents and ligands required for to fabricate high quality CQD solids. We report robust self-assembled monolayers (R-SAMs) that enable us to increase the efficiency of CQD photovoltaics. Only by developing a process for secure anchoring of aromatic SAMs, aided by deposition of the SAMs in a water-free deposition environment, were we able to provide an interface modification that was robust against the ensuing chemical treatments needed in the fabrication of CQD solids. The energy alignment at the rectifying interface was tailored by tuning the R-SAM for optimal alignment relative to the CQD quantum-confined electron energy levels. This resulted in a CQD PV record power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 10.7% with enhanced reproducibility relative to controls.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Double-Sided Junctions Enable High-Performance Colloidal-Quantum-Dot Photovoltaics

Mengxia Liu; F. Pelayo García de Arquer; Yiying Li; Xinzheng Lan; Gi-Hwan Kim; Oleksandr Voznyy; Lethy Krishnan Jagadamma; Abdullah Saud Abbas; Sjoerd Hoogland; Zheng-Hong Lu; Jin Young Kim; Aram Amassian; Edward H. Sargent

The latest advances in colloidal-quantum-dot material processing are combined with a double-sided junction architecture, which is done by efficiently incorporating indium ions in the ZnO eletrode. This platform allows the collection of all photogenerated carriers even at the maximum power point. The increased depletion width in the device facilitates full carrier collection, leading to a record 10.8% power conversion efficiency.


ACS Nano | 2013

Photoelectric energy conversion of plasmon-generated hot carriers in metal-insulator-semiconductor structures.

F. Pelayo García de Arquer; Agustín Mihi; Dominik Kufer; Gerasimos Konstantatos

Plasmonic excitation in metals has received great attention for light localization and control of light-matter interactions at the nanoscale with a plethora of applications in absorption enhancement, surface-enhanced Raman scattering, or biosensing. Electrically active plasmonic devices, which had remained underexplored, have recently become a growing field of interest. In this report we introduce a metal-insulator-semiconductor heterostructure for plasmo-electric energy conversion, a novel architecture to harvest hot-electrons derived from plasmonic excitations. We demonstrate external quantum efficiency (EQE) of 4% at 460 nm using a Ag nanostructured electrode and EQE of 1.3% at 550 nm employing a Au nanostructured electrode. The insulator interfacial layer has been found to play a crucial role in interface passivation, a requisite in photovoltaic applications to achieving both high open-circuit voltages (0.5 V) and fill-factors (0.5), but its introduction simultaneously modifies hot-electron injection and transport. We investigate the influence passivation has on these processes for different material configurations, and characterize different types of transport depending on the initial plasmon energy band, reporting power conversion efficiencies of 0.03% for nanopatterned silver electrodes.


Nano Letters | 2015

Colloidal Quantum Dot Photovoltaics Enhanced by Perovskite Shelling.

Zhenyu Yang; Alyf Janmohamed; Xinzheng Lan; F. Pelayo García de Arquer; Oleksandr Voznyy; Emre Yassitepe; Gi-Hwan Kim; Zhijun Ning; Xiwen Gong; Riccardo Comin; Edward H. Sargent

Solution-processed quantum dots are a promising material for large-scale, low-cost solar cell applications. New device architectures and improved passivation have been instrumental in increasing the performance of quantum dot photovoltaic devices. Here we report photovoltaic devices based on inks of quantum dot on which we grow thin perovskite shells in solid-state films. Passivation using the perovskite was achieved using a facile solution ligand exchange followed by postannealing. The resulting hybrid nanostructure created a more intrinsic CQD film, which, when incorporated into a photovoltaic device with graded bandstructure, achieved a record solar cell performance for single-step-deposited CQD films, exhibiting an AM1.5 solar power conversion efficiency of 8.95%.

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Bin Sun

University of Toronto

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Min Liu

University of Toronto

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Jixian Xu

University of Toronto

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