Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Marja Vilkman is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Marja Vilkman.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2014

Scalable, ambient atmosphere roll-to-roll manufacture of encapsulated large area, flexible organic tandem solar cell modules

Thomas Rieks Andersen; Henrik Friis Dam; Markus Hösel; Martin Helgesen; Jon Eggert Carlé; Thue Trofod Larsen-Olsen; Suren A. Gevorgyan; Jens Wenzel Andreasen; Jens Adams; Ning Li; Florian Machui; George D. Spyropoulos; Tayebeh Ameri; Noëlla Lemaitre; Mathilde Legros; Arnulf Scheel; Detlef Gaiser; Kilian Kreul; Stephane Berny; Owen R. Lozman; Sirpa Nordman; Marja Välimäki; Marja Vilkman; Roar R. Søndergaard; Mikkel Jørgensen; Christoph J. Brabec; Frederik C. Krebs

Inline printing and coating methods have been demonstrated to enable a high technical yield of fully roll-to-roll processed polymer tandem solar cell modules. We demonstrate generality by employing different material sets and also describe how the ink systems must be carefully co-developed in order to reach the ambitious objective of a fully printed and coated 14-layer flexible tandem solar cell stack. The roll-to-roll methodologies involved are flexographic printing, rotary screen printing, slot-die coating, X-ray scattering, electrical testing and UV-lamination. Their combination enables the manufacture of completely functional devices in exceptionally high yields. Critical to the ink and process development is a carefully chosen technology transfer to industry method where first a roll coater is employed enabling contactless stack build up, followed by a small roll-to-roll coater fitted to an X-ray machine enabling in situ studies of wet ink deposition and drying mechanisms, ultimately elucidating how a robust inline processed recombination layer is key to a high technical yield. Finally, the transfer to full roll-to-roll processing is demonstrated.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2014

Cost analysis of roll-to-roll fabricated ITO free single and tandem organic solar modules based on data from manufacture

Florian Machui; Markus Hösel; Ning Li; George D. Spyropoulos; Tayebeh Ameri; Roar R. Søndergaard; Mikkel Jørgensen; Arnulf Scheel; Detlef Gaiser; Kilian Kreul; Daniel Lenssen; Mathilde Legros; Noëlla Lemaitre; Marja Vilkman; Marja Välimäki; Sirpa Nordman; Christoph J. Brabec; Frederik C. Krebs

We present a cost analysis based on state of the art printing and coating processes to fully encapsulated, flexible ITO- and vacuum-free polymer solar cell modules. Manufacturing data for both single junctions and tandem junctions are presented and analyzed. Within this calculation the most expensive layers and processing steps are identified. Based on large roll-to-roll coating experiments the exact material consumptions were determined. In addition to the data for the pilot scale experiment presented here, projections to medium and large scale scenarios serve as a guide to achieve cost targets of 5 €ct per Wp in a detailed material and cost analysis. These scenarios include the replacement of cost intensive layers, as well as process optimization steps. Furthermore, the cost structures for single and tandem devices are listed in detail and discussed. In an optimized model the material costs drop below 10 € per m2 which proves that OPV is a competitive alternative to established power generation technologies.


Nanotechnology | 2010

Substrate-facilitated nanoparticle sintering and component interconnection procedure

Mark Allen; Jaakko Leppäniemi; Marja Vilkman; Ari Alastalo; Tomi Mattila

Room temperature substrate-facilitated sintering of nanoparticles is demonstrated using commercially available silver nanoparticle ink and inkjet printing substrates. The sintering mechanism is based on the chemical removal of the nanoparticle stabilizing ligand and is shown to provide conductivity above one-fourth that of bulk silver. A novel approach to attach discrete components to printed conductors is presented, where the sintered silver provides the metallic interconnects with good electrical and mechanical properties. A process for printing and chip-on-demand assembly is suggested.


Synthetic Metals | 2003

Roll-to-roll method for producing polyaniline patterns on paper

Tapio Mäkelä; Salme Jussila; Marja Vilkman; Harri Kosonen; R. Korhonen

High speed reel-to-reel manufacturing of electrically conductive polyaniline-dodecylbenzenesulfonic acid (PANI-DBSA) patterns directly onto paper substrate were investigated. A printing speed upto 100 meters per minute and line width down to 60 μm with a 60 cm wide paper web with a industrial scale pilot gravure printer was demonstrated. Additional measurements were made with printability tester using the conducting ink which consist of a PANI-DBSA in toluene solution. We illustrate what influence the concentration of the ink, printing speed and pressure at printing nip have on the conductivity of printed patterns.


ACS Applied Energy Materials | 2018

Effect of the Electron Transport Layer on the Interfacial Energy Barriers and Lifetime of R2R Printed Organic Solar Cell Modules

Marja Vilkman; Kaisa‐Leena Väisänen; Pälvi Apilo; Riccardo Po; Marja Välimäki; Mari Ylikunnari; Andrea Bernardi; Tapio Pernu; Gianni Corso; Jani Seitsonen; Santtu Heinilehto; Janne Ruokolainen; Jukka Hast

Understanding the phenomena at interfaces is crucial for producing efficient and stable flexible organic solar cell modules. Minimized energy barriers enable efficient charge transfer, and good adhesion allows mechanical and environmental stability and thus increased lifetime. We utilize here the inverted organic solar module stack and standard photoactive materials (a blend of poly(3-hexylthiophene) and [6,6]-phenyl C61 butyric acid methyl ester) to study the interfaces in a pilot scale large-area roll-to-roll (R2R) process. The results show that the adhesion and work function of the zinc oxide nanoparticle based electron transport layer can be controlled in the R2R process, which allows optimization of performance and lifetime. Plasma treatment of zinc oxide (ZnO) nanoparticles and encapsulation-induced oxygen trapping will increase the absolute value of the ZnO work function, resulting in energy barriers and an S-shaped IV curve. However, light soaking will decrease the zinc oxide work function close to the original value and the S-shape can be recovered, leading to power conversion efficiencies above 3%. We present also an electrical simulation, which supports the results. Finally, we study the effect of plasma treatment in more detail and show that we can effectively remove the organic ligands around the ZnO nanoparticles from the printed layer in a R2R process, resulting in increased adhesion. This postprinting plasma treatment increases the lifetime of the R2R printed modules significantly with modules retaining 80% of their efficiency for ∼3000 h in accelerated conditions. Without plasma treatment, this efficiency level is reached in less than 1000 h.


Nanoscale | 2015

R2R-printed inverted OPV modules – towards arbitrary patterned designs

Marja Välimäki; Pälvi Apilo; Riccardo Po; Elina Jansson; Andrea Bernardi; Mari Ylikunnari; Marja Vilkman; Gianni Corso; J. Puustinen; J. Tuominen; Jukka Hast


Organic Electronics | 2010

Poly(aniline) doped with 5-formyl-2-furansulfonic acid: A humidity memory

Marja Vilkman; Kaisa Lehtinen; Tapio Mäkelä; Patrice Rannou; Olli Ikkala


Macromolecules | 2005

Electrical conductivity transitions and self-assembly in comb-shaped complexes of polyaniline based on crystallization and melting of the supramolecular side chains

Marja Vilkman; Harri Kosonen; Antti Nykänen; Janne Ruokolainen; Mika Torkkeli; Ritva Serimaa; Olli Ikkala


Organic Electronics | 2015

Fully roll-to-roll processed organic top gate transistors using a printable etchant for bottom electrode patterning

Marja Vilkman; Tomi Hassinen; Mikko Keränen; Roger Prétôt; Paul Adriaan Van Der Schaaf; Teemu Ruotsalainen; Henrik Sandberg


Organic Electronics | 2009

Negative differential resistance in polymeric memory devices containing disordered block copolymers with semiconducting block

Marja Vilkman; Kimmo Solehmainen; Ari Laiho; Henrik Sandberg; Olli Ikkala

Collaboration


Dive into the Marja Vilkman's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marja Välimäki

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jukka Hast

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mari Ylikunnari

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pälvi Apilo

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Harri Kosonen

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tapio Mäkelä

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge