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Dive into the research topics where Michael M. Adachi is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael M. Adachi.


ACS Nano | 2014

Conformal Organohalide Perovskites Enable Lasing on Spherical Resonators

Brandon R. Sutherland; Sjoerd Hoogland; Michael M. Adachi; Chris T. O. Wong; Edward H. Sargent

Conformal integration of semiconductor gain media is broadly important in on-chip optical communication technology. Here we deploy atomic layer deposition to create conformally deposited organohalide perovskites--an attractive semiconducting gain medium--with the goal of achieving coherent light emission on spherical optical cavities. We demonstrate the high quality of perovskite gain media fabricated with this method, achieving optical gain in the nanosecond pulse regime with a threshold for amplified spontaneous emission of 65 ± 8 μJ cm(-2). Through variable stripe length measurements, we report a net modal gain of 125 ± 22 cm(-1) and a gain bandwidth of 50 ± 14 meV. Leveraging the high quality of the gain medium, we conformally coat silica microspheres with perovskite to form whispering gallery mode optical cavities and achieve lasing.


Nano Letters | 2015

Colloidal quantum dot solar cells exploiting hierarchical structuring

André J. Labelle; Susanna M. Thon; Silvia Masala; Michael M. Adachi; Haopeng Dong; Maryam Farahani; Alexander H. Ip; Andrea Fratalocchi; Edward H. Sargent

Extremely thin-absorber solar cells offer low materials utilization and simplified manufacture but require improved means to enhance photon absorption in the active layer. Here, we report enhanced-absorption colloidal quantum dot (CQD) solar cells that feature transfer-stamped solution-processed pyramid-shaped electrodes employed in a hierarchically structured device. The pyramids increase, by up to a factor of 2, the external quantum efficiency of the device at absorption-limited wavelengths near the absorber band edge. We show that absorption enhancement can be optimized with increased pyramid angle with an appreciable net improvement in power conversion efficiency, that is, with the gain in current associated with improved absorption and extraction overcoming the smaller fractional decrease in open-circuit voltage associated with increased junction area. We show that the hierarchical combination of micron-scale structured electrodes with nanoscale films provides for an optimized enhancement at absorption-limited wavelengths. We fabricate 54.7° pyramid-patterned electrodes, conformally apply the quantum dot films, and report pyramid CQD solar cells that exhibit a 24% improvement in overall short-circuit current density with champion devices providing a power conversion efficiency of 9.2%.


ACS Nano | 2013

The donor-supply electrode enhances performance in colloidal quantum dot solar cells.

Pouya Maraghechi; André J. Labelle; Ahmad R. Kirmani; Xinzheng Lan; Michael M. Adachi; Susanna M. Thon; Sjoerd Hoogland; Anna Lee; Zhijun Ning; Armin Fischer; Aram Amassian; Edward H. Sargent

Colloidal quantum dot (CQD) solar cells combine solution-processability with quantum-size-effect tunability for low-cost harvesting of the suns broad visible and infrared spectrum. The highest-performing colloidal quantum dot solar cells have, to date, relied on a depleted-heterojunction architecture in which an n-type transparent metal oxide such as TiO2 induces a depletion region in the p-type CQD solid. These devices have, until now, been limited by a modest depletion region depth produced in the CQD solid owing to limitations in the doping available in TiO2. Herein we report a new device geometry-one based on a donor-supply electrode (DSE)-that leads to record-performing CQD photovoltaic devices. Only by employing this new charge-extracting approach do we deepen the depletion region in the CQD solid and thereby extract notably more photocarriers, the key element in achieving record photocurrent and device performance. With the use of optoelectronic modeling corroborated by experiment, we develop the guidelines for building a superior CQD solar cell based on the DSE concept. We confirm that using a shallow-work-function terminal electrode is essential to producing improved charge extraction and enhanced performance.


Nano Letters | 2010

Optical Properties of Crystalline−Amorphous Core−Shell Silicon Nanowires

Michael M. Adachi; M. P. Anantram; Karim S. Karim

The optical absorption in a nanowire heterostructure consisting of a crystalline silicon core surrounded by a conformal shell of amorphous silicon is studied. We show that they exhibit extremely high absorption of 95% at short wavelengths (λ < 550 nm) and a concomitant very low absorption of down to less than 2% at long wavelengths (λ > 780 nm). These results indicate that our nanowires do not have optically active energy levels in the band gap. The absorption edge of silicon nanowires arrays is observed to shift to longer wavelengths as a function of the overall nanowire diameter. The near-infrared absorption of the nanowire array is significantly better than that of thin film amorphous silicon. These properties indicate potential use in large area optoelectronic and photovoltaic applications.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Core-shell silicon nanowire solar cells

Michael M. Adachi; M. P. Anantram; Karim S. Karim

Silicon nanowires can enhance broadband optical absorption and reduce radial carrier collection distances in solar cell devices. Arrays of disordered nanowires grown by vapor-liquid-solid method are attractive because they can be grown on low-cost substrates such as glass, and are large area compatible. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that an array of disordered silicon nanowires surrounded by a thin transparent conductive oxide has both low diffuse and specular reflection with total values as low as < 4% over a broad wavelength range of 400 nm < λ < 650 nm. These anti-reflective properties together with enhanced infrared absorption in the core-shell nanowire facilitates enhancement in external quantum efficiency using two different active shell materials: amorphous silicon and nanocrystalline silicon. As a result, the core-shell nanowire device exhibits a short-circuit current enhancement of 15% with an amorphous Si shell and 26% with a nanocrystalline Si shell compared to their corresponding planar devices.


Nano Letters | 2013

Jointly Tuned Plasmonic–Excitonic Photovoltaics Using Nanoshells

Daniel Paz-Soldan; Anna Lee; Susanna M. Thon; Michael M. Adachi; Haopeng Dong; Pouya Maraghechi; Mingjian Yuan; André J. Labelle; Sjoerd Hoogland; Kun Liu; Eugenia Kumacheva; Edward H. Sargent

Recent advances in spectrally tuned, solution-processed plasmonic nanoparticles have provided unprecedented control over lights propagation and absorption via engineering at the nanoscale. Simultaneous parallel progress in colloidal quantum dot photovoltaics offers the potential for low-cost, large-area solar power; however, these devices suffer from poor quantum efficiency in the more weakly absorbed infrared portion of the suns spectrum. Here, we report a plasmonic-excitonic solar cell that combines two classes of solution-processed infrared materials that we tune jointly. We show through experiment and theory that a plasmonic-excitonic design using gold nanoshells with optimized single particle scattering-to-absorption cross-section ratios leads to a strong enhancement in near-field absorption and a resultant 35% enhancement in photocurrent in the performance-limiting near-infrared spectral region.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Perovskite Thin Films via Atomic Layer Deposition

Brandon R. Sutherland; Sjoerd Hoogland; Michael M. Adachi; Pongsakorn Kanjanaboos; Chris T. O. Wong; Jeffrey J. McDowell; Jixian Xu; Oleksandr Voznyy; Zhijun Ning; Arjan J. Houtepen; Edward H. Sargent

A new method to deposit perovskite thin films that benefit from the thickness control and conformality of atomic layer deposition (ALD) is detailed. A seed layer of ALD PbS is place-exchanged with PbI2 and subsequently CH3 NH3 PbI3 perovskite. These films show promising optical properties, with gain coefficients of 3200 ± 830 cm(-1) .


Scientific Reports | 2013

Broadband solar absorption enhancement via periodic nanostructuring of electrodes

Michael M. Adachi; André J. Labelle; Susanna M. Thon; Xinzheng Lan; Sjoerd Hoogland; Edward H. Sargent

Solution processed colloidal quantum dot (CQD) solar cells have great potential for large area low-cost photovoltaics. However, light utilization remains low mainly due to the tradeoff between small carrier transport lengths and longer infrared photon absorption lengths. Here, we demonstrate a bottom-illuminated periodic nanostructured CQD solar cell that enhances broadband absorption without compromising charge extraction efficiency of the device. We use finite difference time domain (FDTD) simulations to study the nanostructure for implementation in a realistic device and then build proof-of-concept nanostructured solar cells, which exhibit a broadband absorption enhancement over the wavelength range of λ = 600 to 1100 nm, leading to a 31% improvement in overall short-circuit current density compared to a planar device containing an approximately equal volume of active material. Remarkably, the improved current density is achieved using a light-absorber volume less than half that typically used in the best planar devices.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

A two-step route to planar perovskite cells exhibiting reduced hysteresis

Alexander H. Ip; Li Na Quan; Michael M. Adachi; Jeffrey J. McDowell; Jixian Xu; Dong Ha Kim; Edward H. Sargent

A simple two-step method was used to produce efficient planar organolead halide perovskite solar cells. Films produced using solely iodine containing precursors resulted in poor morphology and failed devices, whereas addition of chlorine to the process greatly improved morphology and resulted in dense, uniform perovskite films. This process was used to produce perovskite solar cells with a fullerene-based passivation layer. The hysteresis effect, to which planar perovskite devices are otherwise prone, was greatly suppressed through the use of this interface modifier. The combined techniques resulted in perovskite solar cells having a stable efficiency exceeding 11%. This straightforward fabrication procedure holds promise in development of various optoelectronic applications of planar perovskite films.


Nature Communications | 2015

Microsecond-sustained lasing from colloidal quantum dot solids

Michael M. Adachi; Fengjia Fan; Daniel P. Sellan; Sjoerd Hoogland; Oleksandr Voznyy; Arjan J. Houtepen; Kevin D. Parrish; Pongsakorn Kanjanaboos; Jonathan A. Malen; Edward H. Sargent

Colloidal quantum dots have grown in interest as materials for light amplification and lasing in view of their bright photoluminescence, convenient solution processing and size-controlled spectral tunability. To date, lasing in colloidal quantum dot solids has been limited to the nanosecond temporal regime, curtailing their application in systems that require more sustained emission. Here we find that the chief cause of nanosecond-only operation has been thermal runaway: the combination of rapid heat injection from the pump source, poor heat removal and a highly temperature-dependent threshold. We show microsecond-sustained lasing, achieved by placing ultra-compact colloidal quantum dot films on a thermally conductive substrate, the combination of which minimizes heat accumulation. Specifically, we employ inorganic-halide-capped quantum dots that exhibit high modal gain (1,200 cm−1) and an ultralow amplified spontaneous emission threshold (average peak power of ∼50 kW cm−2) and rely on an optical structure that dissipates heat while offering minimal modal loss.

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M. P. Anantram

University of Washington

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Anna Lee

University of Toronto

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