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Dive into the research topics where Philipp Ehrenreich is active.

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Featured researches published by Philipp Ehrenreich.


APL Materials | 2016

Characterization of perovskite solar cells : towards a reliable measurement protocol

Eugen Zimmermann; Ka Kan Wong; Michael Müller; Hao Hu; Philipp Ehrenreich; Markus Kohlstädt; Uli Würfel; Simone Mastroianni; Gayathri Mathiazhagan; Andreas Hinsch; Tanaji P. Gujar; Mukundan Thelakkat; Thomas Pfadler; Lukas Schmidt-Mende

Lead halide perovskite solar cells have shown a tremendous rise in power conversion efficiency with reported record efficiencies of over 20% making this material very promising as a low cost alternative to conventional inorganic solar cells. However, due to a differently severe “hysteretic” behaviour during current density-voltage measurements, which strongly depends on scan rate, device and measurement history, preparation method, device architecture, etc., commonly used solar cell measurements do not give reliable or even reproducible results. For the aspect of commercialization and the possibility to compare results of different devices among different laboratories, it is necessary to establish a measurement protocol which gives reproducible results. Therefore, we compare device characteristics derived from standard current density-voltage measurements with stabilized values obtained from an adaptive tracking of the maximum power point and the open circuit voltage as well as characteristics extracted from time resolved current density-voltage measurements. Our results provide insight into the challenges of a correct determination of device performance and propose a measurement protocol for a reliable characterisation which is easy to implement and has been tested on varying perovskite solar cells fabricated in different laboratories.


ACS Nano | 2014

Influence of interfacial area on exciton separation and polaron recombination in nanostructured bilayer all-polymer solar cells.

Thomas Pfadler; Mihael Coric; Claudia M. Palumbiny; Andreas C. Jakowetz; Karl-Philipp Strunk; James A. Dorman; Philipp Ehrenreich; Cheng Wang; Alexander Hexemer; Rui-Qi Png; Peter K. H. Ho; Peter Müller-Buschbaum; Jonas Weickert; Lukas Schmidt-Mende

The macroscopic device performance of organic solar cells is governed by interface physics on a nanometer scale. A comb-like bilayer all-polymer morphology featuring a controlled enhancement in donor-acceptor interfacial area is employed as a model system to investigate the fundamental processes of exciton separation and polaron recombination in these devices. The different nanostructures are characterized locally by SEM/AFM, and the buried interdigitating interface of the final device architecture is statistically verified on a large area via advanced grazing incidence X-ray scattering techniques. The results show equally enhanced harvesting of photoexcitons in both donor and acceptor materials directly correlated to the total enhancement of interfacial area. Apart from this beneficial effect, the enhanced interface leads to significantly increased polaron recombination losses both around the open-circuit voltage and maximum power point, which is determined in complement with diode dark current characteristics, impedance spectroscopy, and transient photovoltage measurements. From these findings, it is inferred that a spatially optimized comb-like donor-acceptor nanonetwork alone is not the ideal morphology even though often postulated. Instead, the energetic landscape has to be considered. A perfect morphology for an excitonic solar cell must be spatially and energetically optimized with respect to the donor-acceptor interface.


Nanoscale | 2015

Nanoparticle shape anisotropy and photoluminescence properties: Europium containing ZnO as a Model Case

Melanie Gerigk; Philipp Ehrenreich; M. R. Wagner; Ilona Wimmer; J. S. Reparaz; Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres; Lukas Schmidt-Mende; Sebastian Polarz

The precise control over electronic and optical properties of semiconductor (SC) materials is pivotal for a number of important applications like in optoelectronics, photocatalysis or in medicine. It is well known that the incorporation of heteroelements (doping as a classical case) is a powerful method for adjusting and enhancing the functionality of semiconductors. Independent from that, there already has been a tremendous progress regarding the synthesis of differently sized and shaped SC nanoparticles, and quantum-size effects are well documented experimentally and theoretically. Whereas size and shape control of nanoparticles work fairly well for the pure compounds, the presence of a heteroelement is problematic because the impurities interfere strongly with bottom up approaches applied for the synthesis of such particles, and effects are even stronger, when the heteroelement is aimed to be incorporated into the target lattice for chemical doping. Therefore, realizing coincident shape control of nanoparticle colloids and their doping still pose major difficulties. Due to a special mechanism of the emulsion based synthesis method presented here, involving a gelation of emulsion droplets prior to crystallization of shape-anisotropic ZnO nanoparticles, heteroelements can be effectively entrapped inside the lattice. Different nanocrystal shapes such as nanorods, -prisms, -plates, and -spheres can be obtained, determined by the use of certain emulsification agents. The degree of morphologic alterations depends on the type of incorporated heteroelement M(n+), concentration, and it seems that some shapes are more tolerant against doping than others. Focus was then set on the incorporation of Eu(3+) inside the ZnO particles, and it was shown that nanocrystal shape and aspect ratios could be adjusted while maintaining a fixed dopant level. Special PL properties could be observed implying energy transfer from ZnO excited near its band-gap (3.3 eV) to the Eu(3+) states mediated by defect luminescence of the nanoparticles. Indications for an influence of shape on photoluminescence (PL) properties were found. Finally, rod-like Eu@ZnO colloids were used as tracers to investigate their uptake into biological samples like HeLa cells. The PL was sufficient for identifying green and red emission under visible light excitation.


Scientific Reports | 2016

H-aggregate analysis of P3HT thin films-Capability and limitation of photoluminescence and UV/Vis spectroscopy

Philipp Ehrenreich; Susanne T. Birkhold; Eugen Zimmermann; Hao Hu; Kwang-Dae Kim; Jonas Weickert; Thomas Pfadler; Lukas Schmidt-Mende

Polymer morphology and aggregation play an essential role for efficient charge carrier transport and charge separation in polymer-based electronic devices. It is a common method to apply the H-aggregate model to UV/Vis or photoluminescence spectra in order to analyze polymer aggregation. In this work we present strategies to obtain reliable and conclusive information on polymer aggregation and morphology based on the application of an H-aggregate analysis on UV/Vis and photoluminescence spectra. We demonstrate, with P3HT as model system, that thickness dependent reflection behavior can lead to misinterpretation of UV/Vis spectra within the H-aggregate model. Values for the exciton bandwidth can deviate by a factor of two for polymer thicknesses below 150 nm. In contrast, photoluminescence spectra are found to be a reliable basis for characterization of polymer aggregation due to their weaker dependence on the wavelength dependent refractive index of the polymer. We demonstrate this by studying the influence of surface characteristics on polymer aggregation for spin-coated thin-films that are commonly used in organic and hybrid solar cells.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Role of the Metal-Oxide Work Function on Photocurrent Generation in Hybrid Solar Cells

Chawloon Thu; Philipp Ehrenreich; Ka Kan Wong; Eugen Zimmermann; James A. Dorman; Wei Wang; Azhar Fakharuddin; Martin Putnik; Charalampos Drivas; Aimilios Koutsoubelitis; Maria Vasilopoulou; Leonidas C. Palilis; S. Kennou; Julian Kalb; Thomas Pfadler; Lukas Schmidt-Mende

ZnO is a widely used metal-oxide semiconductor for photovoltaic application. In solar cell heterostructures they not only serve as a charge selective contact, but also act as electron acceptor. Although ZnO offers a suitable interface for exciton dissociation, charge separation efficiencies have stayed rather poor and conceptual differences to organic acceptors are rarely investigated. In this work, we employ Sn doping to ZnO nanowires in order to understand the role of defect and surface states in the charge separation process. Upon doping we are able to modify the metal-oxide work function and we show its direct correlation with the charge separation efficiency. For this purpose, we use the polymer poly(3-hexylthiophene) as donor and the squaraine dye SQ2 as interlayer. Interestingly, neither mobilities nor defects are prime performance limiting factor, but rather the density of available states around the conduction band is of crucial importance for hybrid interfaces. This work highlights crucial aspects to improve the charge generation process of metal-oxide based solar cells and reveals new strategies to improve the power conversion efficiency of hybrid solar cells.


Organic, Hybrid, and Perovskite Photovoltaics XVIII | 2017

Towards a reliable measurement protocol for perovskite solar cells (Conference Presentation)

Eugen Zimmermann; Ka Kan Wong; Michael Müller; Hao Hu; Philipp Ehrenreich; Thomas Pfadler; Carola Ebenhoch; Lukas Schmidt-Mende; Kwanghee Lee; Zakya H. Kafafi; Paul A. Lane

The rapid rise of power conversion efficiency of metal-halide perovskite solar cells beyond 20 % has drawn huge attention. Recent certified efficiencies, however, have been marked as “unstabilized” as perovskite solar cells tend to show a hysteretic behaviour during current density-voltage (J-V) measurements. This leads to deviating results for varying scan parameters and conditions, which challenges reliable and comparable results. In particular, the extent of this behaviour is highly dependent on device preparation method, architecture, device history, and more importantly on measurement preconditions and scan rate. Thus, the demand for reliable stabilized values arises which are reproducible and comparable among different laboratories. Here we introduce an adaptive tracking of the maximum power point and the open circuit voltage. We compare these values with device characteristics derived from standard J-V measurements. Furthermore, we discuss the challenges of a correct efficiency determination and provide the algorithms for easy implementation in existing measurement systems.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017

Incoherent Pathways of Charge Separation in Organic and Hybrid Solar Cells

Alexander Grupp; Philipp Ehrenreich; Julian Kalb; Arne Budweg; Lukas Schmidt-Mende; Daniele Brida

In this work, we investigate the exciton dissociation dynamics occurring at the donor:acceptor interface in organic and hybrid blends employed in the realization of photovoltaic cells. Fundamental differences in the charge separation process are studied with the organic semiconductor polymer poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) and either [6,6]-phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM) or titanium dioxide (TiO2) acting as the acceptor. By using ultrafast broad-band transient absorption spectroscopy with few-fs temporal resolution, we observe that in both cases the incoherent formation of free charges dominates the charge generation process. From the optical response of the polymer and by tracking the excited-state absorption, we extract pivotal similarities in the incoherent energy pathways that follow the impulsive excitation. On time scales shorter than 200 fs, we observe that the two acceptors display similar dynamics in the exciton delocalization. Significant differences arise only on longer time scales with only an impact on the overall photocarrier generation efficiency.


Nature Photonics | 2014

Erroneous efficiency reports harm organic solar cell research

Eugen Zimmermann; Philipp Ehrenreich; Thomas Pfadler; James A. Dorman; Jonas Weickert; Lukas Schmidt-Mende


Advanced Functional Materials | 2015

Defeating Loss Mechanisms in 1D TiO2‐Based Hybrid Solar Cells

Andreas Wisnet; K. Bader; Sophia B. Betzler; Matthias Handloser; Philipp Ehrenreich; Thomas Pfadler; Jonas Weickert; Achim Hartschuh; Lukas Schmidt-Mende; Christina Scheu; James A. Dorman


Physical Review B | 2015

Role of charge separation mechanism and local disorder at hybrid solar cell interfaces

Philipp Ehrenreich; Thomas Pfadler; Francis Paquin; Laura-Isabelle Dion-Bertrand; Olivier Paré-Labrosse; Carlos Silva; Jonas Weickert; Lukas Schmidt-Mende

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Ka Kan Wong

University of Konstanz

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James A. Dorman

Louisiana State University

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Hao Hu

University of Konstanz

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Julian Kalb

University of Konstanz

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