Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Philip C. Y. Chow is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Philip C. Y. Chow.


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.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

A Wide-Bandgap Donor Polymer for Highly Efficient Non-fullerene Organic Solar Cells with a Small Voltage Loss

Shangshang Chen; Yuhang Liu; Lin Zhang; Philip C. Y. Chow; Zheng Wang; Guangye Zhang; Wei Ma; He Yan

To achieve efficient non-fullerene organic solar cells, it is important to reduce the voltage loss from the optical bandgap to the open-circuit voltage of the cell. Here we report a highly efficient non-fullerene organic solar cell with a high open-circuit voltage of 1.08 V and a small voltage loss of 0.55 V. The high performance was enabled by a novel wide-bandgap (2.05 eV) donor polymer paired with a narrow-bandgap (1.63 eV) small-molecular acceptor (SMA). Our morphology characterizations show that both the polymer and the SMA can maintain high crystallinity in the blend film, resulting in crystalline and small domains. As a result, our non-fullerene organic solar cells realize an efficiency of 11.6%, which is the best performance for a non-fullerene organic solar cell with such a small voltage loss.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2013

Charge-Transfer State Dynamics Following Hole and Electron Transfer in Organic Photovoltaic Devices

Artem A. Bakulin; Stoichko D. Dimitrov; Akshay Rao; Philip C. Y. Chow; Christian B. Nielsen; Bob C. Schroeder; Iain McCulloch; Huib J. Bakker; James R. Durrant; Richard H. Friend

The formation of bound electron-hole pairs, also called charge-transfer (CT) states, in organic-based photovoltaic devices is one of the dominant loss mechanisms hindering performance. Whereas CT state dynamics following electron transfer from donor to acceptor have been widely studied, there is not much known about the dynamics of bound CT states produced by hole transfer from the acceptor to the donor. In this letter, we compare the dynamics of CT states formed in the different charge-transfer pathways in a range of model systems. We show that the nature and dynamics of the generated CT states are similar in the case of electron and hole transfer. However the yield of bound and free charges is observed to be strongly dependent on the HOMOD-HOMOA and LUMOD-LUMOA energy differences of the material system. We propose a qualitative model in which the effects of static disorder and sampling of states during the relaxation determine the probability of accessing CT states favorable for charge separation.


Chemical Reviews | 2018

Nonfullerene Acceptor Molecules for Bulk Heterojunction Organic Solar Cells

Guangye Zhang; Jingbo Zhao; Philip C. Y. Chow; Kui Jiang; Jianquan Zhang; Zonglong Zhu; Jie Zhang; Fei Huang; He Yan

The bulk-heterojunction blend of an electron donor and an electron acceptor material is the key component in a solution-processed organic photovoltaic device. In the past decades, a p-type conjugated polymer and an n-type fullerene derivative have been the most commonly used electron donor and electron acceptor, respectively. While most advances of the device performance come from the design of new polymer donors, fullerene derivatives have almost been exclusively used as electron acceptors in organic photovoltaics. Recently, nonfullerene acceptor materials, particularly small molecules and oligomers, have emerged as a promising alternative to replace fullerene derivatives. Compared to fullerenes, these new acceptors are generally synthesized from diversified, low-cost routes based on building block materials with extraordinary chemical, thermal, and photostability. The facile functionalization of these molecules affords excellent tunability to their optoelectronic and electrochemical properties. Within the past five years, there have been over 100 nonfullerene acceptor molecules synthesized, and the power conversion efficiency of nonfullerene organic solar cells has increased dramatically, from ∼2% in 2012 to >13% in 2017. This review summarizes this progress, aiming to describe the molecular design strategy, to provide insight into the structure-property relationship, and to highlight the challenges the field is facing, with emphasis placed on most recent nonfullerene acceptors that demonstrated top-of-the-line photovoltaic performances. We also provide perspectives from a device point of view, wherein topics including ternary blend device, multijunction device, device stability, active layer morphology, and device physics are discussed.


Advanced Materials | 2014

Nanosecond intersystem crossing times in fullerene acceptors: implications for organic photovoltaic diodes.

Philip C. Y. Chow; Sebastian Albert-Seifried; Simon Gélinas; Richard H. Friend

Triplet-exciton formation through intersystem crossing of photogenerated singlet excitons in fullerene acceptors can compete with charge generation in organic photovoltaic diodes. This article reports the intersystem crossing timescale (τISC ) of the most commonly used fullerene acceptors, PC60 BM and PC70 BM, in solutions and in spin-coated films. These times are on the nanosecond timescale, and are longer than the characteristic times for charge generation (τd ).


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2017

Design of Donor Polymers with Strong Temperature-Dependent Aggregation Property for Efficient Organic Photovoltaics

Huawei Hu; Philip C. Y. Chow; Guangye Zhang; Tingxuan Ma; Jing Liu; Guofang Yang; He Yan

Bulk heterojunction (BHJ) organic solar cells (OSCs) have attracted intensive research attention over the past two decades owing to their unique advantages including mechanical flexibility, light weight, large area, and low-cost fabrications. To date, OSC devices have achieved power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) exceeding 12%. Much of the progress was enabled by the development of high-performance donor polymers with favorable morphological, electronic, and optical properties. A key problem in morphology control of OSCs is the trade-off between achieving small domain size and high polymer crystallinity, which is especially important for the realization of efficient thick-film devices with high fill factors. For example, the thickness of OSC blends containing state-of-the-art PTB7 family donor polymers are restricted to ∼100 nm due to their relatively low hole mobility and impure polymer domains. To further improve the device performance and promote commercialization of OSCs, there is a strong demand for the design of new donor polymers that can achieve an optimal blend morphology containing highly crystalline yet reasonably small domains. In this Account, we highlight recent progress on a new family of conjugated polymers with strong temperature-dependent aggregation (TDA) property. These polymers are mostly disaggregated and can be easily dissolved in solution at high temperatures, yet they can strongly aggregate when the solution is cooled to room temperature. This unique aggregation property allows us to control the disorder-order transition of the polymer during solution processing. By preheating the solution to high temperature (∼100 °C), the polymer chains are mostly disaggregated before spin coating; as the temperature of the solution drops during the spin coating process, the polymer can strongly aggregate and form crystalline domains yet that are not excessivelylarge. The overall blend morphology can be optimized by various processing conditions (e.g., temperature, spin-rates, concentration, etc.). This well-controlled and near-optimal BHJ morphology produced over a dozen cases of efficient OSCs with an active layer nearly 300 nm thick that can still achieve high FFs (70-77%) and efficiencies (10-11.7%). By studying the structure-property relationships of the donor polymers, we show that the second position branched alkyl chains and the fluorination on the polymer backbone are two key structural features that enable the strong TDA property. Our comparative studies also show that the TDA polymer family can be used to match with non-fullerene acceptors yielding OSCs with low voltage losses. The key difference between the empirical matching rules for fullerene and non-fullerene OSCs is that TDA polymers with slightly reduced crystallinity appear to match better with small molecular acceptors and yield higher OSC performances.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Recombination pathways in polymer:fullerene photovoltaics observed through spin polarization measurements

Marc K. Etherington; Jianpu Wang; Philip C. Y. Chow; Neil C. Greenham

We report magnetoconductance measurements on polymer:fullerene photovoltaic devices in the regime of high fields and low temperatures, where spin polarization of injected carriers plays an important role. The current either decreases or increases with magnetic field, depending on whether the interfacial charge-transfer state lies above or below the intramolecular triplet state in energy. Rapid transitions from triplet charge-transfer states to lower-lying triplet excitons constitute an important loss mechanism that is responsible for the negative magnetoconductance observed.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2017

A wide bandgap conjugated polymer based on a vertically connected benzodithiophene unit enabling efficient non-fullerene polymer solar cells

Yuhang Liu; Shangshang Chen; Guangye Zhang; Philip C. Y. Chow; He Yan

We report a wide bandgap polymer PvBDTffBT based on a new building block: a vertical-benzodithiophene (vBDT) unit. Compared to traditional BDT based polymers, the vBDT unit in PvBDTffBT is connected via the phenyl group instead of the thiophene unit. Such modification leads to stronger torsion between the vBDT unit and the adjacent thiophene, which increases the bandgap of the polymer and introduces significant changes in the film morphology. When blended with a state-of-the-art narrow-bandgap small molecular acceptor (ITIC-Th), we find that this polymer modulation strategy significantly improves the photovoltaic performances from 3% to over 8%.


Nano Letters | 2015

In Situ Optical Measurement of Charge Transport Dynamics in Organic Photovoltaics

Philip C. Y. Chow; Sam L. Bayliss; Girish Lakhwani; Neil C. Greenham; Richard H. Friend

We present a novel experimental approach which allows extraction of both spatial and temporal information on charge dynamics in organic solar cells. Using the wavelength dependence of the photonic structure in these devices, we monitor the change in spatial overlap between the photogenerated hole distribution and the optical probe profile as a function of time. In a model system we find evidence for a buildup of the photogenerated hole population close to the hole-extracting electrode on a nanosecond time scale and show that this can limit charge transport through space-charge effects under operating conditions.


Nature Communications | 2018

Dual-gate organic phototransistor with high-gain and linear photoresponse

Philip C. Y. Chow; Naoji Matsuhisa; Peter Zalar; Mari Koizumi; Tomoyuki Yokota; Takao Someya

The conversion of light into electrical signal in a photodetector is a crucial process for a wide range of technological applications. Here we report a new device concept of dual-gate phototransistor that combines the operation of photodiodes and phototransistors to simultaneously enable high-gain and linear photoresponse without requiring external circuitry. In an oppositely biased, dual-gate transistor based on a solution-processed organic heterojunction layer, we find that the presence of both n- and p-type channels enables both photogenerated electrons and holes to efficiently separate and transport in the same semiconducting layer. This operation enables effective control of trap carrier density that leads to linear photoresponse with high photoconductive gain and a significant reduction of electrical noise. As we demonstrate using a large-area, 8 × 8 imaging array of dual-gate phototransistors, this device concept is promising for high-performance and scalable photodetectors with tunable dynamic range.High-resolution imaging technologies call for photodetectors with high-gain and linear response over a large dynamic range. Chow et al. show a dual-gate structure that combines the operation of photodiodes and phototransistors to enable both amplified and linear response without external circuitry.

Collaboration


Dive into the Philip C. Y. Chow's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

He Yan

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Guangye Zhang

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shangshang Chen

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Huawei Hu

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Akshay Rao

University of Cambridge

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Harald Ade

North Carolina State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jianquan Zhang

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jingbo Zhao

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge