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Dive into the research topics where Ghada I. Koleilat is active.

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Featured researches published by Ghada I. Koleilat.


ACS Nano | 2008

Efficient, Stable Infrared Photovoltaics Based on Solution-Cast Colloidal Quantum Dots

Ghada I. Koleilat; Larissa Levina; Harnik Shukla; Stefan Myrskog; Sean Hinds; Andras G. Pattantyus-Abraham; Edward H. Sargent

Half of the suns power lies in the infrared. As a result, the optimal bandgaps for solar cells in both the single-junction and even the tandem architectures lie beyond 850 nm. However, progress in low-cost, large-area, physically flexible solar cells has instead been made in organic and polymer materials possessing absorption onsets in the visible. Recent advances have been achieved in solution-cast infrared photovoltaics through the use of colloidal quantum dots. Here we report stable solution-processed photovoltaic devices having 3.6% power conversion efficiency in the infrared. The use of a strongly bound bidentate linker, benzenedithiol, ensures device stability over weeks. The devices reach external quantum efficiencies of 46% in the infrared and 70% across the visible. We investigate in detail the physical mechanisms underlying the operation of this class of device. In contrast with drift-dominated behavior in recent reports of PbS quantum dot photovoltaics, we find that diffusion of electrons and holes over hundreds of nanometers through our PbSe colloidal quantum dot solid is chiefly responsible for the high external quantum efficiencies obtained in this new class of devices.


Advanced Materials | 2014

High Performance All-Polymer Solar Cell via Polymer Side-Chain Engineering

Yan Zhou; Tadanori Kurosawa; Wei Ma; Yikun Guo; Lei Fang; Koen Vandewal; Ying Diao; Chenggong Wang; Qifan Yan; Julia Reinspach; Jianguo Mei; Anthony L. Appleton; Ghada I. Koleilat; Yongli Gao; Stefan C. B. Mannsfeld; Alberto Salleo; Harald Ade; Dahui Zhao; Zhenan Bao

Acknowledge support from the Office of Naval Research (N00014-14-1-0142), KAUST Center for Advanced Molecular Photovoltaics at Stanford and the Stanford Global Climate and Energy Program, NSF DMR-1303742 and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Projects 21174004 and 21222403). Soft X-ray characterization and analysis by NCSU supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Science, Division of Materials Science and Engineering under Contract DE-FG02-98ER45737. Soft X-ray data was acquired at beamlines 11.0.1.2 at the Advanced Light Source, which is supported by the Director, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the U. S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. We thank Professor Michael D. McGehee, Dr. George F. Burkhard and Dr. Eric T. Hoke for their help in discussion of the recombination mechanism.


Advanced Materials | 2011

Electron Acceptor Materials Engineering in Colloidal Quantum Dot Solar Cells

Huan Liu; Jiang Tang; Illan J. Kramer; Ratan Debnath; Ghada I. Koleilat; Xihua Wang; Armin Fisher; Rui Li; Lukasz Brzozowski; Larissa Levina; Edward H. Sargent

Lead sulfide colloidal quantum dot (CQD) solar cells with a solar power conversion efficiency of 5.6% are reported. The result is achieved through careful optimization of the titanium dioxide electrode that serves as the electron acceptor. Metal-ion-doped sol-gel-derived titanium dioxide electrodes produce a tunable-bandedge, well-passivated materials platform for CQD solar cell optimization.


Advanced Materials | 2013

Self-assembled, nanowire network electrodes for depleted bulk heterojunction solar cells.

Xinzheng Lan; Jing Bai; Silvia Masala; Susanna M. Thon; Yuan Ren; Illan J. Kramer; Sjoerd Hoogland; Arash Simchi; Ghada I. Koleilat; Daniel Paz-Soldan; Zhijun Ning; André J. Labelle; Jin Young Kim; Ghassan E. Jabbour; Edward H. Sargent

Herein, a solution-processed, bottom-up-fabricated, nanowire network electrode is developed. This electrode features a ZnO template which is converted into locally connected, infiltratable, TiO2 nanowires. This new electrode is used to build a depleted bulk heterojunction solar cell employing hybrid-passivated colloidal quantum dots. The new electrode allows the application of a thicker, and thus more light-absorbing, colloidal quantum dot active layer, from which charge extraction of an efficiency comparable to that obtained from a thinner, planar device could be obtained.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Mechanically Durable and Highly Stretchable Transistors Employing Carbon Nanotube Semiconductor and Electrodes

Alex Chortos; Ghada I. Koleilat; Raphael Pfattner; Desheng Kong; Pei Lin; Roda Nur; Ting Lei; Huiliang Wang; Nan Liu; Ying-Chih Lai; Myung-Gil Kim; Jong Won Chung; Sangyoon Lee; Zhenan Bao

Mechanically durable stretchable trans-istors are fabricated using carbon nanotube electrical components and tough thermoplastic elastomers. After an initial conditioning step, the electrical characteristics remain constant with strain. The strain-dependent characteristics are similar in orthogonal stretching directions. Devices can be impacted with a hammer and punctured with a needle while remaining functional and stretchable.


ACS Nano | 2014

High-Yield Sorting of Small-Diameter Carbon Nanotubes for Solar Cells and Transistors

Huiliang Wang; Ghada I. Koleilat; Peng Liu; Gonzalo Jiménez-Osés; Ying-Chih Lai; Michael Vosgueritchian; Ya Fang; Steve Park; K. N. Houk; Zhenan Bao

We describe herein a high-yield method to selectively disperse semiconducting CoMoCAT (CO disproportionation on Co-Mo catalysts) single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) with regioregular poly(3-alkylthiophenes) polymers. We observed that the dispersion yield was directly related to the length of the polymers alkyl side chains. Molecular dynamics simulations in explicit toluene (real toluene molecules) indicate that polythiophenes with longer alkyl side chains bind strongly to SWNTs, due to the increased overall surface contact area with the nanotube. Furthermore, the sorting process selectively enriches smaller-diameter CoMoCAT SWNTs with larger bandgaps, which is ideal for solar cell applications. Compared to the larger diameter sorted HiPco (High-Pressure CO) SWNTs, solar cells fabricated using our sorted CoMoCAT SWNTs demonstrated higher open-circuit voltage (Voc) and infrared external quantum efficiency (EQE). The Voc achieved is the highest reported for solar cells based on SWNT absorbers under simulated AM1.5 solar illumination. Additionally, we employed the sorted CoMoCAT SWNTs to fabricate thin film transistors with excellent uniformity and device performance.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2011

Enhanced Open-Circuit Voltage in Visible Quantum Dot Photovoltaics by Engineering of Carrier-Collecting Electrodes

Xihua Wang; Ghada I. Koleilat; Armin Fischer; Jiang Tang; Ratan Debnath; Larissa Levina; Edward H. Sargent

Colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) enable multijunction solar cells using a single material programmed using the quantum size effect. Here we report the systematic engineering of 1.6 eV PbS CQD solar cells, optimal as the front cell responsible for visible-wavelength harvesting in tandem photovoltaics. We rationally optimize each of the devices collecting electrodes-the heterointerface with electron-accepting TiO(2) and the deep-work-function hole-collecting MoO(3) for ohmic contact-for maximum efficiency. We report an open-circuit voltage of 0.70 V, the highest observed in a colloidal quantum dot solar cell operating at room temperature. We report an AM1.5 solar power conversion efficiency of 3.5%, the highest observed in >1.5 eV bandgap CQD PV device.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Folded-Light-Path Colloidal Quantum Dot Solar Cells

Ghada I. Koleilat; Illan J. Kramer; Chris T. O. Wong; Susanna M. Thon; André J. Labelle; Sjoerd Hoogland; Edward H. Sargent

Colloidal quantum dot photovoltaics combine low-cost solution processing with quantum size-effect tuning to match absorption to the solar spectrum. Rapid advances have led to certified solar power conversion efficiencies of over 7%. Nevertheless, these devices remain held back by a compromise in the choice of quantum dot film thickness, balancing on the one hand the need to maximize photon absorption, mandating a thicker film, and, on the other, the need for efficient carrier extraction, a consideration that limits film thickness. Here we report an architecture that breaks this compromise by folding the path of light propagating in the colloidal quantum dot solid. Using this method, we achieve a substantial increase in short-circuit current, ultimately leading to improved power conversion efficiency.


Nano Letters | 2011

A donor-supply electrode (DSE) for colloidal quantum dot photovoltaics.

Ghada I. Koleilat; Xihua Wang; André J. Labelle; Alexander H. Ip; Graham H. Carey; Armin Fischer; Larissa Levina; Lukasz Brzozowski; Edward H. Sargent

The highest-performing colloidal quantum dot (CQD) photovoltaics (PV) reported to date have relied on high-temperature (>500°C) annealing of electron-accepting TiO2. Room-temperature processing reduces energy payback time and manufacturing cost, enables flexible substrates, and permits tandem solar cells that integrate a small-bandgap back cell atop a low-thermal-budget larger-bandgap front cell. Here we report an electrode strategy that enables a depleted-heterojunction CQD PV device to be fabricated entirely at room temperature. We find that simply replacing the high-temperature-processed TiO2 with a sputtered version of the same material leads to poor performance due to the low mobility of the sputtered oxide. We develop instead a two-layer donor-supply electrode (DSE) in which a highly doped, shallow work function layer supplies a high density of free electrons to an ultrathin TiO2 layer via charge-transfer doping. Using the DSE we build all-room-temperature-processed small-bandgap (1 eV) colloidal quantum dot solar cells having 4% solar power conversion efficiency and high fill factor. These 1 eV bandgap cells are suitable for use as the back junction in tandem solar cells. The DSE concept, combined with control over TiO2 stoichiometry in sputtering, provides a much-needed tunable electrode to pair with quantum-size-effect CQD films.


Nano Letters | 2012

Graded recombination layers for multijunction photovoltaics.

Ghada I. Koleilat; Xihua Wang; Edward H. Sargent

Multijunction devices consist of a stack of semiconductor junctions having bandgaps tuned across a broad spectrum. In solar cells this concept is used to increase the efficiency of photovoltaic harvesting, while light emitters and detectors use it to achieve multicolor and spectrally tunable behavior. In series-connected current-matched multijunction devices, the recombination layers must allow the hole current from one cell to recombine, with high efficiency and low voltage loss, with the electron current from the next cell. We recently reported a tandem solar cell in which the recombination layer was implemented using a progression of n-type oxides whose doping densities and work functions serve to connect, with negligible resistive loss at solar current densities, the constituent cells. Here we present the generalized conditions for design of efficient graded recombination layer solar devices. We report the number of interlayers and the requirements on work function and doping of each interlayer, to bridge an work function difference as high as 1.6 eV. We also find solutions that minimize the doping required of the interlayers in order to minimize optical absorption due to free carriers in the graded recombination layer (GRL). We demonstrate a family of new GRL designs experimentally and highlight the benefits of the progression of dopings and work functions in the interlayers.

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Jiang Tang

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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