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Dive into the research topics where Hugo Bronstein is active.

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Featured researches published by Hugo Bronstein.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Thieno[3,2-b]thiophene-Diketopyrrolopyrrole-Containing Polymers for High-Performance Organic Field-Effect Transistors and Organic Photovoltaic Devices

Hugo Bronstein; Zhuoying Chen; Raja Shahid Ashraf; Weimin Zhang; Junping Du; James R. Durrant; Pabitra Shakya Tuladhar; Kigook Song; Scott E. Watkins; Yves Geerts; Mm Martijn Wienk; René A. J. Janssen; Thomas D. Anthopoulos; Henning Sirringhaus; Martin Heeney; Iain McCulloch

We report the synthesis and polymerization of a novel thieno[3,2-b]thiophene-diketopyrrolopyrrole-based monomer. Copolymerization with thiophene afforded a polymer with a maximum hole mobility of 1.95 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1), which is the highest mobility from a polymer-based OFET reported to date. Bulk-heterojunction solar cells comprising this polymer and PC(71)BM gave a power conversion efficiency of 5.4%.


Nature Communications | 2013

Molecular origin of high field-effect mobility in an indacenodithiophene–benzothiadiazole copolymer

Xinran Zhang; Hugo Bronstein; Auke J. Kronemeijer; Jeremy C. Smith; Youngju Kim; R. Joseph Kline; Lee J. Richter; Thomas D. Anthopoulos; Henning Sirringhaus; Kigook Song; Martin Heeney; Weimin Zhang; Iain McCulloch; Dean M. DeLongchamp

One of the most inspiring and puzzling developments in the organic electronics community in the last few years has been the emergence of solution-processable semiconducting polymers that lack significant long-range order but outperform the best, high-mobility, ordered semiconducting polymers to date. Here we provide new insights into the charge-transport mechanism in semiconducting polymers and offer new molecular design guidelines by examining a state-of-the-art indacenodithiophene-benzothiadiazole copolymer having field-effect mobility of up to 3.6 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) with a combination of diffraction and polarizing spectroscopic techniques. Our results reveal that its conjugated planes exhibit a common, comprehensive orientation in both the non-crystalline regions and the ordered crystallites, which is likely to originate from its superior backbone rigidity. We argue that charge transport in high-mobility semiconducting polymers is quasi one-dimensional, that is, predominantly occurring along the backbone, and requires only occasional intermolecular hopping through short π-stacking bridges.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Photocurrent enhancement from diketopyrrolopyrrole polymer solar cells through alkyl-chain branching point manipulation.

Iain Meager; Raja Shahid Ashraf; Sonya Mollinger; Bob C. Schroeder; Hugo Bronstein; Daniel Beatrup; Michelle S. Vezie; Thomas Kirchartz; Alberto Salleo; Jenny Nelson; Iain McCulloch

Systematically moving the alkyl-chain branching position away from the polymer backbone afforded two new thieno[3,2-b]thiophene-diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPPTT-T) polymers. When used as donor materials in polymer:fullerene solar cells, efficiencies exceeding 7% were achieved without the use of processing additives. The effect of the position of the alkyl-chain branching point on the thin-film morphology was investigated using X-ray scattering techniques and the effects on the photovoltaic and charge-transport properties were also studied. For both solar cell and transistor devices, moving the branching point further from the backbone was beneficial. This is the first time that this effect has been shown to improve solar cell performance. Strong evidence is presented for changes in microstructure across the series, which is most likely the cause for the photocurrent enhancement.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2012

Design of Semiconducting Indacenodithiophene Polymers for High Performance Transistors and Solar Cells

Iain McCulloch; Raja Shahid Ashraf; Laure Biniek; Hugo Bronstein; Craig Combe; Jenny E. Donaghey; David Ian James; Christian B. Nielsen; Bob C. Schroeder; Weimin Zhang

The prospect of using low cost, high throughput material deposition processes to fabricate organic circuitry and solar cells continues to drive research towards improving the performance of the semiconducting materials utilized in these devices. Conjugated aromatic polymers have emerged as a leading candidate semiconductor material class, due to their combination of their amenability to processing and reasonable electrical and optical performance. Challenges remain, however, to further improve the charge carrier mobility of the polymers for transistor applications and the power conversion efficiency for solar cells. This optimization requires a clear understanding of the relationship between molecular structure and both electronic properties and thin film morphology. In this Account, we describe an optimization process for a series of semiconducting polymers based on an electron rich indacenodithiophene aromatic backbone skeleton. We demonstrate the effect of bridging atoms, alkyl chain functionalization, and co-repeating units on the morphology, molecular orbital energy levels, charge carrier mobility, and solar cell efficiencies. This conjugated unit is extremely versatile with a coplanar aromatic ring structure, and the electron density can be manipulated by the choice of bridging group between the rings. The functionality of the bridging group also plays an important role in the polymer solubility, and out of plane aliphatic chains present in both the carbon and silicon bridge promote solubility. This particular polymer conformation, however, typically suppresses long range organization and crystallinity, which had been shown to strongly influence charge transport. In many cases, polymers exhibited both high solubility and excellent charge transport properties, even where there was no observable evidence of polymer crystallinity. The optical bandgap of the polymers can be tuned by the combination of the donating power of the bridging unit and the electron withdrawing nature of co-repeat units, alternating along the polymer backbone. Using strong donors and acceptors, we could shift the absorption into the near infrared.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Charge Recombination in Organic Photovoltaic Devices with High Open-Circuit Voltages

Sebastian Westenhoff; Ian A. Howard; Justin M. Hodgkiss; Kiril R. Kirov; Hugo Bronstein; Charlotte K. Williams; Neil C. Greenham; Richard H. Friend

A detailed charge recombination mechanism is presented for organic photovoltaic devices with a high open-circuit voltage. In a binary blend comprised of polyfluorene copolymers, the performance-limiting process is found to be the efficient recombination of tightly bound charge pairs into neutral triplet excitons. We arrive at this conclusion using optical transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy with visible and IR probes and over seven decades of time resolution. By resolving the polarization of the TA signal, we track the movement of polaronic states generated at the heterojunction not only in time but also in space. It is found that the photogenerated charge pairs are remarkably immobile at the heterojunction during their lifetime. The charge pairs are shown to be subject to efficient intersystem crossing and terminally recombine into F8BT triplet excitons within approximately 40 ns. Long-range charge separation competes rather unfavorably with intersystem crossing--75% of all charge pairs decay into triplet excitons. Triplet exciton states are thermodynamically accessible in polymer solar cells with high open circuit voltage, and we therefore suggest this loss mechanism to be general. We discuss guidelines for the design of the next generation of organic photovoltaic materials where separating the metastable interfacial charge pairs within approximately 40 ns is paramount.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Externally initiated regioregular P3HT with controlled molecular weight and narrow polydispersity.

Hugo Bronstein; Christine K. Luscombe

The ability of chemists to design and synthesize pi-conjugated organic polymers with precise control remains the key to technological breakthroughs for using polymer materials in electronic and photonic devices. In this communication, the controlled chain-growth polymerization of regioregular poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) from an external initiator using 1,3-bis(diphenylphosphino)propane (dppp) as a catalyst ligand is reported. The complexes cis-chloro(phenyl)(dppp)nickel(II) and cis-chloro(o-tolyl)(dppp)nickel(II) were synthesized and characterized by (31)P NMR spectroscopy. These complexes served as initiators in the polymerization of 2-bromo-5-chloromagnesio-3-hexylthiophene in THF at room temperature, affording fully regioregular P3HT with controlled molecular weights and narrow molecular weight distributions, as demonstrated by gel-permeation chromatography and (1)H NMR spectroscopy. MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry revealed that the polymers had almost complete incorporation of the initiating aryl group, and when the aryl group was o-tolyl, only Tol/H end groups were observed. Although external initiators have been used previously with a PPh(3) ligand, that methodology led to polymers with broad molecular weight distributions. This is the first example in which complete control over the externally initiated P3HT polymerization has been achieved.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

On the Energetic Dependence of Charge Separation in Low-Band-Gap Polymer/Fullerene Blends

Stoichko D. Dimitrov; Artem A. Bakulin; Christian B. Nielsen; Bob C. Schroeder; Junping Du; Hugo Bronstein; Iain McCulloch; Richard H. Friend; Durrant

The energetic driving force required to drive charge separation across donor/acceptor heterojunctions is a key consideration for organic optoelectronic devices. Herein we report a series of transient absorption and photocurrent experiments as a function of excitation wavelength and temperature for two low-band-gap polymer/fullerene blends to study the mechanism of charge separation at the donor/acceptor interface. For the blend that exhibits the smallest donor/acceptor LUMO energy level offset, the photocurrent quantum yield falls as the photon excitation energy is reduced toward the band gap, but the yield of bound, interfacial charge transfer states rises. This interplay between bound and free charge generation as a function of initial exciton energy provides key evidence for the role of excess energy in driving charge separation of direct relevance to the development of low-band-gap polymers for enhanced solar light harvesting.


ACS Nano | 2014

Morphological Stability and Performance of Polymer–Fullerene Solar Cells under Thermal Stress: The Impact of Photoinduced PC60BM Oligomerization

Him Cheng Wong; Zhe Li; Ching Hong Tan; H Zhong; Zhenggang Huang; Hugo Bronstein; Iain McCulloch; João T. Cabral; Durrant

We report a general light processing strategy for organic solar cells (OSC) that exploits the propensity of the fullerene derivative PC60BM to photo-oligomerize, which is capable of both stabilizing the polymer:PC60BM active layer morphology and enhancing the device stability under thermal annealing. The observations hold for blends of PC60BM with an array of benchmark donor polymer systems, including P3HT, DPP-TT-T, PTB7, and PCDTBT. The morphology and kinetics of the thermally induced PC60BM crystallization within the blend films are investigated as a function of substrate and temperature. PC60BM nucleation rates on SiOx substrates exhibit a pronounced peak profile with temperature, whose maximum is polymer and blend-composition dependent. Modest illumination (<10 mW/cm(2)) significantly suppresses nucleation, which is quantified as function of dose, but does not affect crystalline shape or growth, in the micrometer range. On PEDOT:PSS substrates, thermally induced PC60BM aggregation is observed on smaller (≈ 100 nm) length scales, depending upon donor polymer, and also suppressed by light exposure. The concurrent thermal dissociation process of PC60BM oligomers in blend films is also investigated and the activation energy of the fullerene-fullerene bond is estimated to be 0.96 ± 0.04 eV. Following light processing, the thermal stability, and thus lifetime, of PCDTBT:PC60BM devices increases for annealing times up to 150 h. In contrast, PCDTBT:PC70BM OSCs are found to be largely light insensitive. The results are rationalized in terms of the suppression of PC60BM micro- and nanoscopic crystallization processes upon thermal annealing caused by photoinduced PC60BM oligomerization.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Charge Recombination and Exciton Annihilation Reactions in Conjugated Polymer Blends

Ian A. Howard; Justin M. Hodgkiss; Xinping Zhang; Kiril R. Kirov; Hugo Bronstein; Charlotte K. Williams; Richard H. Friend; Sebastian Westenhoff; Neil C. Greenham

Bimolecular interactions between excitations in conjugated polymer thin films are important because they influence the efficiency of many optoelectronic devices that require high excitation densities. Using time-resolved optical spectroscopy, we measure the bimolecular interactions of charges, singlet excitons, and triplet excitons in intimately mixed polyfluorene blends with band-edge offsets optimized for photoinduced electron transfer. Bimolecular charge recombination and triplet-triplet annihilation are negligible, but exciton-charge interactions are efficient. The annihilation of singlet excitons by charges occurs on picosecond time-scales and reaches a rate equivalent to that of charge transfer. Triplet exciton annihilation by charges occurs on nanosecond time-scales. The surprising absence of nongeminate charge recombination is shown to be due to the limited mobility of charge carriers at the heterojunction. Therefore, extremely high densities of charge pairs can be maintained in the blend. The absence of triplet-triplet annihilation is a consequence of restricted triplet diffusion in the blend morphology. We suggest that the rate and nature of bimolecular interactions are determined by the stochastic excitation distribution in the polymer blend and the limited connectivity between the polymer domains. A model based on these assumptions quantitatively explains the effects. Our findings provide a comprehensive framework for understanding bimolecular recombination and annihilation processes in nanostructured materials.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2015

Scalable route to CH3NH3PbI3 perovskite thin films by aerosol assisted chemical vapour deposition

Davinder S. Bhachu; David O. Scanlon; E. J. Saban; Hugo Bronstein; Ivan P. Parkin; Claire J. Carmalt; Robert G. Palgrave

Methyl-ammonium lead iodide is the archetypal perovskite solar cell material. Phase pure, compositionally uniform methyl-ammonium lead iodide thin films on large glass substrates were deposited using ambient pressure aerosol assisted chemical vapour deposition. This opens up a route to efficient scale up of hybrid perovskite film growth towards industrial deployment.

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Iain McCulloch

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Thomas D. Anthopoulos

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Christian B. Nielsen

Queen Mary University of London

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Iain Meager

Imperial College London

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