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Dive into the research topics where Hin-Lap Yip is active.

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Featured researches published by Hin-Lap Yip.


Applied Physics Letters | 2008

Air-stable inverted flexible polymer solar cells using zinc oxide nanoparticles as an electron selective layer

Steven K. Hau; Hin-Lap Yip; Nam Seob Baek; Jingyu Zou; Kevin M. O’Malley; Alex K.-Y. Jen

The performance and stability of unencapsulated inverted bulk-heterojunction solar cells with zinc oxide (ZnO) made by different processes as the electron selective contact are compared to conventional bulk-heterojunction solar cells. The low temperature processed inverted devices using ZnO nanoparticles on indium tin oxide plastic substrates showed high power conversion efficiency of ∼3.3%. This inverted device structure possessed much better stability under ambient conditions retaining over 80% of its original conversion efficiency after 40days while the conventional one showed negligible photovoltaic activity after 4days. This is due to the improved stability at the poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonate)/Ag interface.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Development of New Conjugated Polymers with Donor−π-Bridge−Acceptor Side Chains for High Performance Solar Cells

Fei Huang; Kung-Shih Chen; Hin-Lap Yip; Steven K. Hau; Orb Acton; Yong Zhang; Jingdong Luo; Alex K.-Y. Jen

Two new conjugated polymers have been designed and synthesized for polymer solar cells. Both of them exhibit excellent photovoltaic properties with a power conversion efficiency as high as 4.74%. Different from the traditional linear donor-acceptor (D-A) type conjugated polymers, these newly designed polymers have a two-dimensional conjugated structure with their tunable acceptors located at the end of D-A side chains and connected with the donors on the main chain through an efficient pi-bridge. This approach provides great flexibility in fine-tuning the absorption spectra and energy levels of the resultant polymers for achieving high device performance.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2012

Functional fullerenes for organic photovoltaics

Chang-Zhi Li; Hin-Lap Yip; Alex K.-Y. Jen

Tremendous progress has been made on the design and processing of new active and interfacial materials to enable organic photovoltaics to achieve high power conversion efficiencies of >10%. In this Feature Article the development of functional fullerenes as (1) acceptors, (2) electron selective layers, and (3) morphology stabilizers for bulk heterojunction polymer solar cells is reviewed. In addition to the standard PCBM based acceptors, a wide variety of newly developed fullerene-derived molecules have appeared in the past few years and started to show very encouraging photovoltaic performance when they were blended with low bandgap conjugated polymers. New fullerene derivatives with proper molecular design can also serve as electron selective interfacial materials and morphology stabilizers for the bulk heterojunction layer, which are essential to improve the interfacial property and long term stability of polymer solar cells. Although there still are many challenges ahead before practical polymer solar cells will arrive in the market place, the research in functional fullerenes deserves to have more attention in order to expedite this development process.


Applied Physics Letters | 2002

Blocking reactions between indium-tin oxide and poly (3,4-ethylene dioxythiophene):poly(styrene sulphonate) with a self-assembly monolayer

Ka Wai Wong; Hin-Lap Yip; Yi Luo; King-Young Wong; W. M. Lau; Kamhung Low; Hak-Fun Chow; Zhiqiang Gao; W.L. Yeung; Chih-Yu Chang

In the fabrication of polymeric electroluminescent devices with indium-tin oxide (ITO) as anode, indium contamination of the polymers can greatly degrade the device performance. In the present study, we have used x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to measure indium incorporation in poly(3,4-ethylene dioxythiophene):poly(styrene sulphonate), referred to as PEDOT:PSS, which were spincast on bare ITO and encapsulated ITO. We found that the deposition of a self-assembled monolayer of alkylsiloxanes on ITO prior to spincasting PEDOT:PSS was effective and practical in blocking the reactions between ITO and PEDOT:PSS.


Applied Physics Letters | 2008

High performance ambient processed inverted polymer solar cells through interfacial modification with a fullerene self-assembled monolayer

Steven K. Hau; Hin-Lap Yip; Hong Ma; Alex K.-Y. Jen

The performance of inverted bulk-heterojunction solar cells with zinc oxide nanoparticles as the electron selective contact is compared to those modified with a fullerene self-assembled monolayer (C60-SAM). The devices modified with a C60-SAM show very significant improvement in conversion efficiencies compared to unmodified devices leading to efficiencies as high as 4.9%. This is due to enhanced electronic coupling of the inorganic/organic interface from the C60-SAM leading to improved fill factor and photocurrent. Furthermore, devices fabricated in an inert environment were compared to those fabricated in ambient showing comparable device performance.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

High-Efficiency Polymer Solar Cells via the Incorporation of an Amino-Functionalized Conjugated Metallopolymer as a Cathode Interlayer

Shengjian Liu; Kai Zhang; Junming Lu; Jie Zhang; Hin-Lap Yip; Fei Huang; Yong Cao

An amino-functionalized conjugated metallopolymer PFEN-Hg was developed as a cathode interlayer for inverted polymer solar cells. The resulting devices exhibited significantly improved performance with power conversion efficiencies exceeding 9%. Moreover, good device performance was achievable with the PFEN-Hg over a wider range of film thickness, likely due to the Hg-Hg interactions and improved π-π stacking.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Improved Charge Transport and Absorption Coefficient in Indacenodithieno[3,2‐b]thiophene‐based Ladder‐Type Polymer Leading to Highly Efficient Polymer Solar Cells

Yun-Xiang Xu; Chu-Chen Chueh; Hin-Lap Yip; Feizhi Ding; Yongxi Li; Chang-Zhi Li; Xiaosong Li; Wen-Chang Chen; Alex K.-Y. Jen

A novel ladder-type donor (IDTT) is developed by substituting the two outward thiophenes of the IDT donor with two thieno[3,2-b]thiophenes. The polymer derived from this donor possesses longer effective conjugation and better planarity, which improves electron delocalization along the polymer backbone and charge mobility. The polymer solar cell device using PIDTT-DFBT shows a high power conversion efficiency of 7.03% with a large open-circuit voltage of 0.95 V without using any additives or post-solvent/thermal annealing processes.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2008

Interfacial modification to improve inverted polymer solar cells

Steven K. Hau; Hin-Lap Yip; Orb Acton; Nam Seob Baek; Hong Ma; Alex K.-Y. Jen

We report improved device performance of poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) and [6,6]phenyl C61butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM)-based inverted bulk-heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells through the modified interface of the TiO2/BHJ with a series of carboxylic acid functionalized self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). The SAMs reduce the series resistance and improve the shunt resistance of the cell leading to increased fill factor and photocurrent density. Different aspects of device improvement can be affected depending on the nature of the SAMs. Modification with a C60-SAM shows the largest enhancement leading to a 35% improvement (η = 3.78%) over unmodified inverted devices (η = 2.80%). This SAM serves multiple functions to affect the photoinduced charge transfer at the interface to reduce the recombination of charges, passivation of inorganic surface trap states, improve the exciton dissociation efficiency at the polymer/TiO2 interface as well as a template to influence the overlayer BHJ distribution of phases, morphology and crystallinity leading to better charge selectivity and improved solar cell performance.


Polymer Reviews | 2010

A Review on the Development of the Inverted Polymer Solar Cell Architecture

Steven K. Hau; Hin-Lap Yip; Alex K.-Y. Jen

The increase in energy production costs for fossil fuels has led to a search for an economically viable alternative energy source. One alternative energy source of particular interest is solar energy. A promising alternative to inorganic materials is organic semiconductor polymer solar cells due to their advantages of being cheaper, light weight, flexible and made into large areas by roll-to-roll processing. However, the conventional architecture that is typically used for fabricating solar cells requires high vacuum to deposit the top metal electrode which is not suitable for roll-to-roll processing. Recently an inverted device architecture has been investigated as a suitable architecture for developing the ideal roll-to-roll type processing of polymer-based solar cells. This review will go over the recent advances and approaches in the development of this type of inverted device architecture. We will highlight some of the work that we have done to integrate materials, device, interface, and processing of the inverted device architecture platform to produce more idealized polymer-based solar cells.


Nature | 2013

The role of spin in the kinetic control of recombination in organic photovoltaics

Akshay Rao; Philip C. Y. Chow; Simon Gélinas; Cody W. Schlenker; Chang-Zhi Li; Hin-Lap Yip; Alex K.-Y. Jen; David S. Ginger; Richard H. Friend

In biological complexes, cascade structures promote the spatial separation of photogenerated electrons and holes, preventing their recombination. In contrast, the photogenerated excitons in organic photovoltaic cells are dissociated at a single donor–acceptor heterojunction formed within a de-mixed blend of the donor and acceptor semiconductors. The nanoscale morphology and high charge densities give a high rate of electron–hole encounters, which should in principle result in the formation of spin-triplet excitons, as in organic light-emitting diodes. Although organic photovoltaic cells would have poor quantum efficiencies if every encounter led to recombination, state-of-the-art examples nevertheless demonstrate near-unity quantum efficiency. Here we show that this suppression of recombination arises through the interplay between spin, energetics and delocalization of electronic excitations in organic semiconductors. We use time-resolved spectroscopy to study a series of model high-efficiency polymer–fullerene systems in which the lowest-energy molecular triplet exciton (T1) for the polymer is lower in energy than the intermolecular charge transfer state. We observe the formation of T1 states following bimolecular recombination, indicating that encounters of spin-uncorrelated electrons and holes generate charge transfer states with both spin-singlet (1CT) and spin-triplet (3CT) characters. We show that the formation of triplet excitons can be the main loss mechanism in organic photovoltaic cells. But we also find that, even when energetically favoured, the relaxation of 3CT states to T1 states can be strongly suppressed by wavefunction delocalization, allowing for the dissociation of 3CT states back to free charges, thereby reducing recombination and enhancing device performance. Our results point towards new design rules both for photoconversion systems, enabling the suppression of electron–hole recombination, and for organic light-emitting diodes, avoiding the formation of triplet excitons and enhancing fluorescence efficiency.

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Alex K.-Y. Jen

City University of Hong Kong

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Yong Cao

South China University of Technology

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Fei Huang

South China University of Technology

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Kung-Shih Chen

University of Washington

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Qifan Xue

South China University of Technology

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Steven K. Hau

University of Washington

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Hong Ma

University of Washington

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Yong Zhang

Harbin Institute of Technology

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Chen Sun

South China University of Technology

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