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Dive into the research topics where Joel Jean is active.

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Featured researches published by Joel Jean.


Advanced Materials | 2013

ZnO Nanowire Arrays for Enhanced Photocurrent in PbS Quantum Dot Solar Cells

Joel Jean; Sehoon Chang; Patrick R. Brown; Jayce J. Cheng; Paul H. Rekemeyer; Moungi G. Bawendi; Silvija Gradečak; Vladimir Bulovic

Vertical arrays of ZnO nanowires can decouple light absorption from carrier collection in PbS quantum dot solar cells and increase power conversion efficiencies by 35%. The resulting ordered bulk heterojunction devices achieve short-circuit current densities in excess of 20 mA cm(-2) and efficiencies of up to 4.9%.


Nano Letters | 2013

Graphene Cathode-Based ZnO Nanowire Hybrid Solar Cells

Hyesung Park; Sehoon Chang; Joel Jean; Jayce J. Cheng; Paulo T. Araujo; Mingsheng Wang; Moungi G. Bawendi; Mildred S. Dresselhaus; Vladimir Bulovic; Jing Kong; Silvija Gradečak

Growth of semiconducting nanostructures on graphene would open up opportunities for the development of flexible optoelectronic devices, but challenges remain in preserving the structural and electrical properties of graphene during this process. We demonstrate growth of highly uniform and well-aligned ZnO nanowire arrays on graphene by modifying the graphene surface with conductive polymer interlayers. On the basis of this structure, we then demonstrate graphene cathode-based hybrid solar cells using two different photoactive materials, PbS quantum dots and the conjugated polymer P3HT, with AM 1.5G power conversion efficiencies of 4.2% and 0.5%, respectively, approaching the performance of ITO-based devices with similar architectures. Our method preserves beneficial properties of graphene and demonstrates that it can serve as a viable replacement for ITO in various photovoltaic device configurations.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2015

Pathways for solar photovoltaics

Joel Jean; Patrick R. Brown; R.L. Jaffe; Tonio Buonassisi; Vladimir Bulovic

Solar energy is one of the few renewable, low-carbon resources with both the scalability and the technological maturity to meet ever-growing global demand for electricity. Among solar power technologies, solar photovoltaics (PV) are the most widely deployed, providing 0.87% of the worlds electricity in 2013 and sustaining a compound annual growth rate in cumulative installed capacity of 43% since 2000. Given the massive scale of deployment needed, this article examines potential limits to PV deployment at the terawatt scale, emphasizing constraints on the use of commodity and PV-critical materials. We propose material complexity as a guiding framework for classifying PV technologies, and we analyze three core themes that focus future research and development: efficiency, materials use, and manufacturing complexity and cost.


Nano Letters | 2015

Open-Circuit Voltage Deficit, Radiative Sub-Bandgap States, and Prospects in Quantum Dot Solar Cells

Chia-Hao Marcus Chuang; Andrea Maurano; Riley E. Brandt; Gyu Weon Hwang; Joel Jean; Tonio Buonassisi; Vladimir Bulovic; Moungi G. Bawendi

Quantum dot photovoltaics (QDPV) offer the potential for low-cost solar cells. To develop strategies for continued improvement in QDPVs, a better understanding of the factors that limit their performance is essential. Here, we study carrier recombination processes that limit the power conversion efficiency of PbS QDPVs. We demonstrate the presence of radiative sub-bandgap states and sub-bandgap state filling in operating devices by using photoluminescence (PL) and electroluminescence (EL) spectroscopy. These sub-bandgap states are most likely the origin of the high open-circuit-voltage (VOC) deficit and relatively limited carrier collection that have thus far been observed in QDPVs. Combining these results with our perspectives on recent progress in QDPV, we conclude that eliminating sub-bandgap states in PbS QD films has the potential to show a greater gain than may be attainable by optimization of interfaces between QDs and other materials. We suggest possible future directions that could guide the design of high-performance QDPVs.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Strongly Enhanced Photovoltaic Performance and Defect Physics of Air‐Stable Bismuth Oxyiodide (BiOI)

Robert L. Z. Hoye; Lana C. Lee; Rachel C. Kurchin; Tahmida N. Huq; Kelvin H. L. Zhang; Melany Sponseller; Lea Nienhaus; Riley E. Brandt; Joel Jean; James Alexander Polizzotti; Ahmed Kursumovic; Moungi G. Bawendi; Vladimir Bulovic; Vladan Stevanović; Tonio Buonassisi; Judith L. MacManus-Driscoll

Bismuth-based compounds have recently gained increasing attention as potentially nontoxic and defect-tolerant solar absorbers. However, many of the new materials recently investigated show limited photovoltaic performance. Herein, one such compound is explored in detail through theory and experiment: bismuth oxyiodide (BiOI). BiOI thin films are grown by chemical vapor transport and found to maintain the same tetragonal phase in ambient air for at least 197 d. The computations suggest BiOI to be tolerant to antisite and vacancy defects. All-inorganic solar cells (ITO|NiOx |BiOI|ZnO|Al) with negligible hysteresis and up to 80% external quantum efficiency under select monochromatic excitation are demonstrated. The short-circuit current densities and power conversion efficiencies under AM 1.5G illumination are nearly double those of previously reported BiOI solar cells, as well as other bismuth halide and chalcohalide photovoltaics recently explored by many groups. Through a detailed loss analysis using optical characterization, photoemission spectroscopy, and device modeling, direction for future improvements in efficiency is provided. This work demonstrates that BiOI, previously considered to be a poor photocatalyst, is promising for photovoltaics.


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

Interference-enhanced infrared-to-visible upconversion in solid-state thin films sensitized by colloidal nanocrystals

Mengfei Wu; Joel Jean; Vladimir Bulovic; Marc A. Baldo

Infrared-to-visible photon upconversion has potential applications in photovoltaics, sensing, and bioimaging. We demonstrate a solid-state thin-film device that utilizes sensitized triplet-triplet exciton annihilation, converting infrared photons absorbed by colloidal lead sulfide nanocrystals (NCs) into visible photons emitted from a luminescent dopant in rubrene at low incident light intensities. A typical bilayer device consisting of a monolayer of NCs and a doped film of rubrene is limited by low infrared absorption in the thin NC film. Here, we augment the bilayer with an optical spacer layer and a silver-film back reflector, resulting in interference effects that enhance the optical field and thus the absorption in the NC film. The interference-enhanced device shows an order-of-magnitude increase in the upconverted emission at the wavelength of λ = 610 nm when excited at λ = 980 nm. At incident light intensities above 1.1 W/cm2, the device attains maximum efficiency, converting (1.6 ± 0.2)% of absor...


Energy and Environmental Science | 2018

Synthesis cost dictates the commercial viability of lead sulfide and perovskite quantum dot photovoltaics

Joel Jean; Justin Xiao; Robert Nick; Nicole Susanne Moody; Michel Nasilowski; Moungi G. Bawendi; Vladimir Bulovic

Any new solar photovoltaic (PV) technology must reach low production costs to compete with todays market-leading crystalline silicon and commercial thin-film PV technologies. Colloidal quantum dots (QDs) could open up new applications by enabling lightweight and flexible PV modules. However, the cost of synthesizing nanocrystals at the large scale needed for PV module production has not previously been investigated. Based on our experience with commercial QD scale-up, we develop a Monte Carlo model to analyze the cost of synthesizing lead sulfide and metal halide perovskite QDs using 8 different reported synthetic methods. We also analyze the cost of solution-phase ligand exchange for preparing deposition-ready PbS QD inks, as well as the manufacturing cost for roll-to-roll solution-processed PV modules using these materials. We find that present QD synthesis costs are prohibitively high for PV applications, with median costs of 11 to 59


Nature Photonics | 2016

Solid-state infrared-to-visible upconversion sensitized by colloidal nanocrystals

Mengfei Wu; Daniel N. Congreve; Mark W. Wilson; Joel Jean; Nadav Geva; Matthew Welborn; Troy Van Voorhis; Vladimir Bulovic; Moungi G. Bawendi; Marc A. Baldo

per g for PbS QDs (0.15 to 0.84


Organic Electronics | 2016

In situ vapor-deposited parylene substrates for ultra-thin, lightweight organic solar cells

Joel Jean; Annie Wang; Vladimir Bulovic

per W for a 20% efficient cell) and 73


ACS energy letters | 2017

Radiative Efficiency Limit with Band Tailing Exceeds 30% for Quantum Dot Solar Cells

Joel Jean; Thomas Stephen Mahony; Deniz Bozyigit; Melany Sponseller; Jakub Holovský; Moungi G. Bawendi; Vladimir Bulovic

per g for CsPbI3 QDs (0.74

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Vladimir Bulovic

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Moungi G. Bawendi

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Tonio Buonassisi

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Melany Sponseller

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Patrick R. Brown

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Riley E. Brandt

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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James Alexander Polizzotti

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Jayce J. Cheng

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Rachel C. Kurchin

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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