R. J. Nicholas
University of Oxford
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Publication
Featured researches published by R. J. Nicholas.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2007
Adrian Nish; Jeong-Yuan Hwang; James Doig; R. J. Nicholas
Solubilizing and purifying carbon nanotubes remains one of the foremost technological hurdles in their investigation and application. We report a dramatic improvement in the preparation of single-walled carbon nanotube solutions based on the ability of specific aromatic polymers to efficiently disperse certain nanotube species with a high degree of selectivity. Evidence of this is provided by optical absorbance and photoluminescence excitation spectra, which show suspensions corresponding to up to approximately 60% relative concentration of a single species of isolated nanotubes with fluorescence quantum yields of up to 1.5%. Different polymers show the ability to discriminate between nanotube species in terms of either diameter or chiral angle. Modelling suggests that rigid-backbone polymers form ordered molecular structures surrounding the nanotubes with n-fold symmetry determined by the tube diameter.
Nano Letters | 2014
Jacob Tse-Wei Wang; James M. Ball; Eva M. Barea; Antonio Abate; Jack A. Alexander-Webber; Jian Huang; Michael Saliba; Iván Mora-Seró; Juan Bisquert; Henry J. Snaith; R. J. Nicholas
The highest efficiencies in solution-processable perovskite-based solar cells have been achieved using an electron collection layer that requires sintering at 500 °C. This is unfavorable for low-cost production, applications on plastic substrates, and multijunction device architectures. Here we report a low-cost, solution-based deposition procedure utilizing nanocomposites of graphene and TiO2 nanoparticles as the electron collection layers in meso-superstructured perovskite solar cells. The graphene nanoflakes provide superior charge-collection in the nanocomposites, enabling the entire device to be fabricated at temperatures no higher than 150 °C. These solar cells show remarkable photovoltaic performance with a power conversion efficiency up to 15.6%. This work demonstrates that graphene/metal oxide nanocomposites have the potential to contribute significantly toward the development of low-cost solar cells.
Nano Letters | 2014
Severin N. Habisreutinger; Tomas Leijtens; Giles E. Eperon; Samuel D. Stranks; R. J. Nicholas; Henry J. Snaith
Organic-inorganic perovskite solar cells have recently emerged at the forefront of photovoltaics research. Power conversion efficiencies have experienced an unprecedented increase to reported values exceeding 19% within just four years. With the focus mainly on efficiency, the aspect of stability has so far not been thoroughly addressed. In this paper, we identify thermal stability as a fundamental weak point of perovskite solar cells, and demonstrate an elegant approach to mitigating thermal degradation by replacing the organic hole transport material with polymer-functionalized single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) embedded in an insulating polymer matrix. With this composite structure, we achieve JV scanned power-conversion efficiencies of up to 15.3% with an average efficiency of 10 ± 2%. Moreover, we observe strong retardation in thermal degradation as compared to cells employing state-of-the-art organic hole-transporting materials. In addition, the resistance to water ingress is remarkably enhanced. These are critical developments for achieving long-term stability of high-efficiency perovskite solar cells.
Nature Physics | 2015
Atsuhiko Miyata; Anatolie A. Mitioglu; P. Plochocka; Oliver Portugall; Jacob Tse-Wei Wang; Samuel D. Stranks; Henry J. Snaith; R. J. Nicholas
Direct measurement of the exciton binding energy shows that the impressive performance of perovskite solar cells arises from the spontaneous generation of free electrons and holes after light absorption.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Jeong-Yuan Hwang; Adrian Nish; James Doig; Sigrid Douven; Chun-Wei Chen; Li-Chyong Chen; R. J. Nicholas
Combinations of different aromatic polymers and organic solvents have been studied as dispersing agents for preparing single-walled carbon nanotubes solutions, using optical absorbance, photoluminescence-excitation mapping, computer modeling, and electron microscopic imaging to characterize the solutions. Both the polymer structure and solvent used strongly influence the dispersion of the nanotubes, leading in some cases to very high selectivity in terms of diameter and chiral angle. The highest selectivities are observed using toluene with the rigid polymers PFO-BT and PFO to suspend isolated nanotubes. The specific nanotube species selected are also dependent on the solvent used and can be adjusted by the use of THF or xylene. Where the structure has more flexible conformations, the polymers are shown to be less selective but show an enhanced overall solubilization of nanotube material. When chloroform is used as the solvent, there is a large increase in the overall solubilization, but the nanotubes are suspended as bundles rather than as isolated tubes which leads to a quenching of their photoluminescence.
Physical Review B | 2007
R. S. Deacon; K.-C. Chuang; R. J. Nicholas; K. S. Novoselov; A. K. Geim
We report studies of cyclotron resonance in monolayer graphene. Cyclotron resonance is detected using the photoconductive response of the sample for several different Landau level occupancies. The experiments measure an electron velocity at the K- (Dirac) point of
Energy and Environmental Science | 2016
Krzysztof Galkowski; Anatolie A. Mitioglu; Atsuhiko Miyata; P. Plochocka; Oliver Portugall; Giles E. Eperon; Jacob Tse-Wei Wang; Thomas Stergiopoulos; Samuel D. Stranks; Henry J. Snaith; R. J. Nicholas
c_{K}^{*}
Applied Physics Letters | 1979
R. J. Nicholas; J. C. Portal; C. Houlbert; P. Perrier; T. P. Pearsall
= 1.093 x 10
Energy and Environmental Science | 2016
Jacob Tse-Wei Wang; Zhiping Wang; Sandeep Pathak; Wei Zhang; Dane W. deQuilettes; Florencia Wisnivesky-Rocca-Rivarola; Jian Huang; Pabitra K. Nayak; Jay B. Patel; Hanis A. Mohd Yusof; Yana Vaynzof; Rui Zhu; Ivan Ramirez; Jin Zhang; Caterina Ducati; C.R.M. Grovenor; Michael B. Johnston; David S. Ginger; R. J. Nicholas; Henry J. Snaith
^{6}
Advanced Materials | 2016
Michael Saliba; Simon M. Wood; Jay B. Patel; Pabitra K. Nayak; Jian Huang; Jack A. Alexander-Webber; Bernard Wenger; Samuel D. Stranks; Maximilian T. Hörantner; Jacob Tse-Wei Wang; R. J. Nicholas; Laura M. Herz; Michael B. Johnston; Stephen M. Morris; Henry J. Snaith; Moritz Riede
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