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Dive into the research topics where Ruipeng Li is active.

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Featured researches published by Ruipeng Li.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Solution‐Processed Small Molecule‐Polymer Blend Organic Thin‐Film Transistors with Hole Mobility Greater than 5 cm2/Vs

Jeremy Smith; Weimin Zhang; Rachid Sougrat; Kui Zhao; Ruipeng Li; Dongkyu Cha; Aram Amassian; Martin Heeney; Iain McCulloch; Thomas D. Anthopoulos

Using phase-separated organic semiconducting blends containing a small molecule, as the hole transporting material, and a conjugated amorphous polymer, as the binder material, we demonstrate solution-processed organic thin-film transistors with superior performance characteristics that include; hole mobility >5 cm(2) /Vs, current on/off ratio ≥10(6) and narrow transistor parameter spread. These exceptional characteristics are attributed to the electronic properties of the binder polymer and the advantageous nanomorphology of the blend film.


Advanced Materials | 2013

Spin-cast bulk heterojunction solar cells: a dynamical investigation.

Kang Wei Chou; Buyi Yan; Ruipeng Li; Er Qiang Li; Kui Zhao; Dalaver H. Anjum; Steven Alvarez; Robert Gassaway; Alan Biocca; Sigurdur T. Thoroddsen; Alexander Hexemer; Aram Amassian

Spin-coating is extensively used in the lab-based manufacture of organic solar cells, including most of the record-setting solution-processed cells. We report the first direct observation of photoactive layer formation as it occurs during spin-coating. The study provides new insight into mechanisms and kinetics of bulk heterojunction formation, which may be crucial for its successful transfer to scalable printing processes.


Advanced Materials | 2013

Re‐evaluating the Role of Sterics and Electronic Coupling in Determining the Open‐Circuit Voltage of Organic Solar Cells

Kenneth R. Graham; Patrick Erwin; Dennis Nordlund; Koen Vandewal; Ruipeng Li; Guy Olivier Ngongang Ndjawa; Eric T. Hoke; Alberto Salleo; Mark E. Thompson; Michael D. McGehee; Aram Amassian

The effects of sterics and molecular orientation on the open-circuit voltage and absorbance properties of charge-transfer states are explored in model bilayer organic photovoltaics. It is shown that the open-circuit voltage correlates linearly with the charge-transfer state energy and is not significantly influenced by electronic coupling.


Nature Communications | 2015

Solution-Printed Organic Semiconductor Blends Exhibiting Transport Properties on Par with Single Crystals

Muhammad R. Niazi; Ruipeng Li; Er Qiang Li; Ahmad R. Kirmani; Maged Abdelsamie; Qingxiao Wang; Wenyang Pan; Marcia M. Payne; John E. Anthony; Detlef-M. Smilgies; Sigurdur T. Thoroddsen; Emmanuel P. Giannelis; Aram Amassian

Solution-printed organic semiconductors have emerged in recent years as promising contenders for roll-to-roll manufacturing of electronic and optoelectronic circuits. The stringent performance requirements for organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs) in terms of carrier mobility, switching speed, turn-on voltage and uniformity over large areas require performance currently achieved by organic single-crystal devices, but these suffer from scale-up challenges. Here we present a new method based on blade coating of a blend of conjugated small molecules and amorphous insulating polymers to produce OTFTs with consistently excellent performance characteristics (carrier mobility as high as 6.7 cm2 V−1 s−1, low threshold voltages of<1 V and low subthreshold swings <0.5 V dec−1). Our findings demonstrate that careful control over phase separation and crystallization can yield solution-printed polycrystalline organic semiconductor films with transport properties and other figures of merit on par with their single-crystal counterparts.


Nature Communications | 2014

One-dimensional self-confinement promotes polymorph selection in large-area organic semiconductor thin films

Gaurav Giri; Ruipeng Li; Detlef-M. Smilgies; Er Qiang Li; Ying Diao; Kristina M. Lenn; Melanie Chiu; Debora W. Lin; Ranulfo Allen; Julia Reinspach; Stefan C. B. Mannsfeld; Sigurdur T. Thoroddsen; Paulette Clancy; Zhenan Bao; Aram Amassian

A crystals structure has significant impact on its resulting biological, physical, optical and electronic properties. In organic electronics, 6,13(bis-triisopropylsilylethynyl)pentacene (TIPS-pentacene), a small-molecule organic semiconductor, adopts metastable polymorphs possessing significantly faster charge transport than the equilibrium crystal when deposited using the solution-shearing method. Here, we use a combination of high-speed polarized optical microscopy, in situ microbeam grazing incidence wide-angle X-ray-scattering and molecular simulations to understand the mechanism behind formation of metastable TIPS-pentacene polymorphs. We observe that thin-film crystallization occurs first at the air-solution interface, and nanoscale vertical spatial confinement of the solution results in formation of metastable polymorphs, a one-dimensional and large-area analogy to crystallization of polymorphs in nanoporous matrices. We demonstrate that metastable polymorphism can be tuned with unprecedented control and produced over large areas by either varying physical confinement conditions or by tuning energetic conditions during crystallization through use of solvent molecules of various sizes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Reconstructing a solid-solid phase transformation pathway in CdSe nanosheets with associated soft ligands.

Zhongwu Wang; Xiao-Dong Wen; Roald Hoffmann; Jae Sung Son; Ruipeng Li; Chia-Chen Fang; Detlef-M. Smilgies; Taeghwan Hyeon

Integrated single-crystal-like small and wide-angle X-ray diffraction images of a CdSe nanosheet under pressure provide direct experimental evidence for the detailed pathway of transformation of the CdSe from a wurtzite to a rock-salt structure. Two consecutive planar atomic slips [(001) 〈110〉 in parallel and (102) with a distortion angle of ∼40°] convert the wurtzite-based nanosheet into a saw-like rock-salt nanolayer. The transformation pressure is three times that in the bulk CdSe crystal. Theoretical calculations are in accord with the mechanism and the change in transformation pressure, and point to the critical role of the coordinated amines. Soft ligands not only increase the stability of the wurtzite structure, but also improve its elastic strength and fracture toughness. A ligand extension of 2.3 nm appears to be the critical dimension for a turning point in stress distribution, leading to the formation of wurtzite (001)/zinc-blende (111) stacking faults before rock-salt nucleation.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2017

Stable high efficiency two-dimensional perovskite solar cells via cesium doping

Xu Zhang; Xiaodong Ren; Bin Liu; Rahim Munir; Xuejie Zhu; Dong Yang; Jianbo Li; Yucheng Liu; Detlef-M. Smilgies; Ruipeng Li; Zhou Yang; Tianqi Niu; Xiuli Wang; Aram Amassian; Kui Zhao; Shengzhong Liu

Two-dimensional (2D) organic–inorganic perovskites have recently emerged as one of the most important thin-film solar cell materials owing to their excellent environmental stability. The remaining major pitfall is their relatively poor photovoltaic performance in contrast to 3D perovskites. In this work we demonstrate cesium cation (Cs+) doped 2D (BA)2(MA)3Pb4I13 perovskite solar cells giving a power conversion efficiency (PCE) as high as 13.7%, the highest among the reported 2D devices, with excellent humidity resistance. The enhanced efficiency from 12.3% (without Cs+) to 13.7% (with 5% Cs+) is attributed to perfectly controlled crystal orientation, an increased grain size of the 2D planes, superior surface quality, reduced trap-state density, enhanced charge-carrier mobility and charge-transfer kinetics. Surprisingly, it is found that the Cs+ doping yields superior stability for the 2D perovskite solar cells when subjected to a high humidity environment without encapsulation. The device doped using 5% Cs+ degrades only ca. 10% after 1400 hours of exposure in 30% relative humidity (RH), and exhibits significantly improved stability under heating and high moisture environments. Our results provide an important step toward air-stable and fully printable low dimensional perovskites as a next-generation renewable energy source.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Solvent-Mediated Self-Assembly of Nanocube Superlattices

Zewei Quan; Hongwu Xu; Chenyu Wang; Xiao-Dong Wen; Yuxuan Wang; Jinlong Zhu; Ruipeng Li; Chris J. Sheehan; Zhongwu Wang; Detlef-M. Smilgies; Zhiping Luo; Jiye Fang

Self-organization of colloidal Pt nanocubes into two types of distinct ordered superlattices, simple-cubic and body-centered-tetragonal structures, has been achieved using a home-built setup. Detailed translational and orientational characteristics of these superstructures were determined using a transmission electron microscopy tomographic technique with 3D reconstruction analysis. The formation of these distinct superlattices is the result of a delicate choice of solvent (i.e., aliphatic hexane or aromatic toluene hydrocarbons), which serves as a dispersion medium to fine-tune the relative strengths of ligand-ligand and ligand-solvent interactions during the self-assembly process. This work provides important insights into the effects of ligand-solvent interactions on superlattice formation from nonspherical nanoparticles.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Decoding the Superlattice and Interface Structure of Truncate PbS Nanocrystal-Assembled Supercrystal and Associated Interaction Forces

Ruipeng Li; Kaifu Bian; Tobias Hanrath; William A. Bassett; Zhongwu Wang

Large scale three-dimensional supercrystals were grown by controlling evaporation of truncate PbS nanocrystal (NC) dispersed hexane suspensions. Electron microscopy analysis confirmed the nature of single supercrystal with a face-centered cubic (fcc) lattice. Synchrotron small/wide angle scattering (SAXS/WAXS) images from three typical crystallographic projections allowed ultimate reconstruction of shape orientations of NCs at different crystallographic sites. Position exchange of distinctly oriented NCs between crystallographic sites produces two nondegeneration shape-related pseudo-polymorphs of superlattice that accordingly reduce symmetry from Oh to C4h and C2h with various facet-to-facet arrangements, respectively. In situ SAXS measurements of NC-assembled supercrystal and lead oleate and oleic acid upon pressurization provide additional insights into surface ligand density and the nature of ligand-NC interactions and resulting interface structure. These results allow for feasible evaluation of both NC shape and ligand conformation enabled effects that govern the formation and stability of truncate NC assemblies with various superlattice polymorphs and associated NC-ligand interactions in solvent-mediated assembled processes.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Direct Structural Mapping of Organic Field‐Effect Transistors Reveals Bottlenecks to Carrier Transport

Ruipeng Li; Jeremy W. Ward; Detlef-M. Smilgies; Marcia M. Payne; John E. Anthony; Oana D. Jurchescu; Aram Amassian

O N Organic fi eld-effect transistors (OFETs) continue to attract considerable attention due to the steady improvement of their performance over the past decade and their increasingly competitive position with respect to inorganic technologies, such as a-Si. The availability of solution-processable high-performance organic semiconductors makes this a particularly attractive technology for use in low-cost, fl exible and lightweight electronic devices. [ 1–4 ] However, it is often the case that the microstructure of organic semiconductors in devices is far from ideal and very challenging to understand and control when fi lms are deposited on top of a substrate patterned with electrodes. The organic fi lm can present heterogeneities across multiple length scales, this being a serious limitation for the performance and reproducibility of corresponding devices. In particular, it has been shown that the microstructure and morphology of the organic semiconductor, including its crystallinity, [ 5 , 6 ] polymorphism and texture, [ 7 , 8 ] grain and domain sizes, [ 9 , 10 ] grain boundary density and misorientation, [ 11 , 12 ] , as well as surface coverage and wettability of the substrate play pivotal roles in mediating device performance. [ 13 , 14 ] For instance, in the case of fl uorinated 5,11-bis(triethylsilylethynyl) anthradithiophene (diF-TES-ADT), treatment of the bottom Au contacts with pentafl uorobenzene thiol (PFBT) has been shown to dramatically improve carrier transport in bottom-contact OFETs. [ 15 , 16 ] The surface treatment prevents the < 111 > -textured crystallites exhibiting poor in-plane π -stacking from nucleating. It was shown that < 001 > grains grow on the treated electrodes and extend laterally several microns from their edges, thus preventing growth of the undesirable crystallite orientations in

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Aram Amassian

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Kui Zhao

Shaanxi Normal University

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Maged Abdelsamie

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Jiye Fang

Binghamton University

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Hadayat Ullah Khan

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Thomas D. Anthopoulos

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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