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Dive into the research topics where Riley E. Brandt is active.

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Featured researches published by Riley E. Brandt.


Advanced Materials | 2014

Atomic Layer Deposited Gallium Oxide Buffer Layer Enables 1.2 V Open-Circuit Voltage in Cuprous Oxide Solar Cells

Yun Seog Lee; Danny Chua; Riley E. Brandt; Sin Cheng Siah; Jian V. Li; Jonathan P. Mailoa; Sang Woon Lee; Roy G. Gordon; Tonio Buonassisi

The power conversion efficiency of solar cells based on copper (I) oxide (Cu2 O) is enhanced by atomic layer deposition of a thin gallium oxide (Ga2 O3 ) layer. By improving band-alignment and passivating interface defects, the device exhibits an open-circuit voltage of 1.20 V and an efficiency of 3.97%, showing potential of over 7% efficiency.


Advanced Materials | 2014

3.88% Efficient Tin Sulfide Solar Cells using Congruent Thermal Evaporation

Vera Steinmann; R. Jaramillo; Katy Hartman; Rupak Chakraborty; Riley E. Brandt; Jeremy R. Poindexter; Yun Seog Lee; Leizhi Sun; Alexander Polizzotti; Helen Hejin Park; Roy G. Gordon; Tonio Buonassisi

Tin sulfide (SnS), as a promising absorber material in thin-film photovoltaic devices, is described. Here, it is confirmed that SnS evaporates congruently, which provides facile composition control akin to cadmium telluride. A SnS heterojunction solar cell is demons trated, which has a power conversion efficiency of 3.88% (certified), and an empirical loss analysis is presented to guide further performance improvements.


Nano Letters | 2015

Open-Circuit Voltage Deficit, Radiative Sub-Bandgap States, and Prospects in Quantum Dot Solar Cells

Chia-Hao Marcus Chuang; Andrea Maurano; Riley E. Brandt; Gyu Weon Hwang; Joel Jean; Tonio Buonassisi; Vladimir Bulovic; Moungi G. Bawendi

Quantum dot photovoltaics (QDPV) offer the potential for low-cost solar cells. To develop strategies for continued improvement in QDPVs, a better understanding of the factors that limit their performance is essential. Here, we study carrier recombination processes that limit the power conversion efficiency of PbS QDPVs. We demonstrate the presence of radiative sub-bandgap states and sub-bandgap state filling in operating devices by using photoluminescence (PL) and electroluminescence (EL) spectroscopy. These sub-bandgap states are most likely the origin of the high open-circuit-voltage (VOC) deficit and relatively limited carrier collection that have thus far been observed in QDPVs. Combining these results with our perspectives on recent progress in QDPV, we conclude that eliminating sub-bandgap states in PbS QD films has the potential to show a greater gain than may be attainable by optimization of interfaces between QDs and other materials. We suggest possible future directions that could guide the design of high-performance QDPVs.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

Methylammonium Bismuth Iodide as a Lead-Free, Stable Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Solar Absorber.

Robert L. Z. Hoye; Riley E. Brandt; Anna Osherov; Vladan Stevanović; Samuel D. Stranks; Mark W. Wilson; Hyunho Kim; Austin J. Akey; John D. Perkins; Rachel C. Kurchin; Jeremy R. Poindexter; Evelyn N. Wang; Moungi G. Bawendi; Vladimir Bulovic; Tonio Buonassisi

Methylammonium lead halide (MAPbX3 ) perovskites exhibit exceptional carrier transport properties. But their commercial deployment as solar absorbers is currently limited by their intrinsic instability in the presence of humidity and their lead content. Guided by our theoretical predictions, we explored the potential of methylammonium bismuth iodide (MBI) as a solar absorber through detailed materials characterization. We synthesized phase-pure MBI by solution and vapor processing. In contrast to MAPbX3, MBI is air stable, forming a surface layer that does not increase the recombination rate. We found that MBI luminesces at room temperature, with the vapor-processed films exhibiting superior photoluminescence (PL) decay times that are promising for photovoltaic applications. The thermodynamic, electronic, and structural features of MBI that are amenable to these properties are also present in other hybrid ternary bismuth halide compounds. Through MBI, we demonstrate a lead-free and stable alternative to MAPbX3 that has a similar electronic structure and nanosecond lifetimes.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Hall mobility of cuprous oxide thin films deposited by reactive direct-current magnetron sputtering

Yun Seog Lee; Mark T. Winkler; Sin Cheng Siah; Riley E. Brandt; Tonio Buonassisi

Cuprous oxide (Cu2O) is a promising earth-abundant semiconductor for photovoltaic applications. We report Hall mobilities of polycrystalline Cu2O thin films deposited by reactive dc magnetron sputtering. High substrate growth temperature enhances film grain structure and Hall mobility. Temperature-dependent Hall mobilities measured on these films are comparable to monocrystalline Cu2O at temperatures above 250 K, reaching 62 cm2/V s at room temperature. At lower temperatures, the Hall mobility appears limited by carrier scattering from ionized centers. These observations indicate that sputtered Cu2O films at high substrate growth temperature may be suitable for thin-film photovoltaic applications.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Band offsets of n-type electron-selective contacts on cuprous oxide (Cu2O) for photovoltaics

Riley E. Brandt; Matthew Young; Helen Hejin Park; Arrelaine Dameron; Danny Chua; Yun Seog Lee; Glenn Teeter; Roy G. Gordon; Tonio Buonassisi

The development of cuprous oxide (Cu2O) photovoltaics (PVs) is limited by low device open-circuit voltages. A strong contributing factor to this underperformance is the conduction-band offset between Cu2O and its n-type heterojunction partner or electron-selective contact. In the present work, a broad range of possible n-type materials is surveyed, including ZnO, ZnS, Zn(O,S), (Mg,Zn)O, TiO2, CdS, and Ga2O3. Band offsets are determined through X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and optical bandgap measurements. A majority of these materials is identified as having a negative conduction-band offset with respect to Cu2O; the detrimental impact of this on open-circuit voltage (VOC) is evaluated through 1-D device simulation. These results suggest that doping density of the n-type material is important as well, and that a poorly optimized heterojunction can easily mask changes in bulk minority carrier lifetime. Promising heterojunction candidates identified here include Zn(O,S) with [S]/[Zn] ratios >70%, and Ga...


Journal of Applied Physics | 2015

Framework to predict optimal buffer layer pairing for thin film solar cell absorbers: A case study for tin sulfide/zinc oxysulfide

Niall M. Mangan; Riley E. Brandt; Vera Steinmann; R. Jaramillo; Chuanxi Yang; Jeremy R. Poindexter; Rupak Chakraborty; Helen Hejin Park; Xizhu Zhao; Roy G. Gordon; Tonio Buonassisi

An outstanding challenge in the development of novel functional materials for optoelectronic devices is identifying suitable charge-carrier contact layers. Herein, we simulate the photovoltaic device performance of various n-type contact material pairings with tin(II) sulfide (SnS), a p-type absorber. The performance of the contacting material, and resulting device efficiency, depend most strongly on two variables: conduction band offset between absorber and contact layer, and doping concentration within the contact layer. By generating a 2D contour plot of device efficiency as a function of these two variables, we create a performance-space plot for contacting layers on a given absorber material. For a simulated high-lifetime SnS absorber, this 2D performance-space illustrates two maxima, one local and one global. The local maximum occurs over a wide range of contact-layer doping concentrations (below 1016 cm−3), but only a narrow range of conduction band offsets (0 to −0.1 eV), and is highly sensitive t...


APL Materials | 2015

Perspective: Maintaining surface-phase purity is key to efficient open air fabricated cuprous oxide solar cells

Robert L. Z. Hoye; Riley E. Brandt; Yulia Ievskaya; Shane Heffernan; Kevin P. Musselman; Tonio Buonassisi; Judith L. MacManus-Driscoll

Electrochemically deposited Cu2O solar cells are receiving growing attention owing to a recent doubling in efficiency. This was enabled by the controlled chemical environment used in depositing doped ZnO layers by atomic layer deposition, which is not well suited to large-scale industrial production. While open air fabrication with atmospheric pressure spatial atomic layer deposition overcomes this limitation, we find that this approach is limited by an inability to remove the detrimental CuO layer that forms on the Cu2O surface. Herein, we propose strategies for achieving efficiencies in atmospherically processed cells that are equivalent to the high values achieved in vacuum processed cells.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Non-monotonic effect of growth temperature on carrier collection in SnS solar cells

Ritayan Chakraborty; Vera Steinmann; Niall M. Mangan; Riley E. Brandt; Jeremy R. Poindexter; R. Jaramillo; Jonathan P. Mailoa; Katy Hartman; Alexander Polizzotti; Chuanxi Yang; Roy G. Gordon; Tonio Buonassisi

We quantify the effects of growth temperature on material and device properties of thermally evaporated SnS thin-films and test structures. Grain size, Hall mobility, and majority-carrier concentration monotonically increase with growth temperature. However, the charge collection as measured by the long-wavelength contribution to short-circuit current exhibits a non-monotonic behavior: the collection decreases with increased growth temperature from 150 °C to 240 °C and then recovers at 285 °C. Fits to the experimental internal quantum efficiency using an opto-electronic model indicate that the non-monotonic behavior of charge-carrier collection can be explained by a transition from drift- to diffusion-assisted components of carrier collection. The results show a promising increase in the extracted minority-carrier diffusion length at the highest growth temperature of 285 °C. These findings illustrate how coupled mechanisms can affect early stage device development, highlighting the critical role of direct...


Advanced Materials | 2017

Strongly Enhanced Photovoltaic Performance and Defect Physics of Air‐Stable Bismuth Oxyiodide (BiOI)

Robert L. Z. Hoye; Lana C. Lee; Rachel C. Kurchin; Tahmida N. Huq; Kelvin H. L. Zhang; Melany Sponseller; Lea Nienhaus; Riley E. Brandt; Joel Jean; James Alexander Polizzotti; Ahmed Kursumovic; Moungi G. Bawendi; Vladimir Bulovic; Vladan Stevanović; Tonio Buonassisi; Judith L. MacManus-Driscoll

Bismuth-based compounds have recently gained increasing attention as potentially nontoxic and defect-tolerant solar absorbers. However, many of the new materials recently investigated show limited photovoltaic performance. Herein, one such compound is explored in detail through theory and experiment: bismuth oxyiodide (BiOI). BiOI thin films are grown by chemical vapor transport and found to maintain the same tetragonal phase in ambient air for at least 197 d. The computations suggest BiOI to be tolerant to antisite and vacancy defects. All-inorganic solar cells (ITO|NiOx |BiOI|ZnO|Al) with negligible hysteresis and up to 80% external quantum efficiency under select monochromatic excitation are demonstrated. The short-circuit current densities and power conversion efficiencies under AM 1.5G illumination are nearly double those of previously reported BiOI solar cells, as well as other bismuth halide and chalcohalide photovoltaics recently explored by many groups. Through a detailed loss analysis using optical characterization, photoemission spectroscopy, and device modeling, direction for future improvements in efficiency is provided. This work demonstrates that BiOI, previously considered to be a poor photocatalyst, is promising for photovoltaics.

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Tonio Buonassisi

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Yun Seog Lee

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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R. Jaramillo

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Sin Cheng Siah

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Vera Steinmann

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Jeremy R. Poindexter

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Rachel C. Kurchin

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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