Sandra Jenatsch
Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sandra Jenatsch.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Hui Zhang; Sandra Jenatsch; Jelissa De Jonghe; Frank Nüesch; Roland Steim; Anna C. Véron; Roland Hany
Organic photodetectors are interesting for low cost, large area optical sensing applications. Combining organic semiconductors with discrete absorption bands outside the visible wavelength range with transparent and conductive electrodes allows for the fabrication of visibly transparent photodetectors. Visibly transparent photodetectors can have far reaching impact in a number of areas including smart displays, window-integrated electronic circuits and sensors. Here, we demonstrate a near-infrared sensitive, visibly transparent organic photodetector with a very high average visible transmittance of 68.9%. The transmitted light of the photodetector under solar irradiation exhibits excellent transparency colour perception and rendering capabilities. At a wavelength of 850 nm and at −1 V bias, the photoconversion efficiency is 17% and the specific detectivity is 1012 Jones. Large area photodetectors with an area of 1.6 cm2 are demonstrated.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Andreas Borgschulte; Olga Sambalova; Renaud Delmelle; Sandra Jenatsch; Roland Hany; Frank Nüesch
The color changes in chemo- and photochromic MoO3 used in sensors and in organic photovoltaic (OPV) cells can be traced back to intercalated hydrogen atoms stemming either from gaseous hydrogen dissociated at catalytic surfaces or from photocatalytically split water. In applications, the reversibility of the process is of utmost importance, and deterioration of the layer functionality due to side reactions is a critical challenge. Using the membrane approach for high-pressure XPS, we are able to follow the hydrogen reduction of MoO3 thin films using atomic hydrogen in a water free environment. Hydrogen intercalates into MoO3 forming HxMoO3, which slowly decomposes into MoO2 +1/2 H2O as evidenced by the fast reduction of Mo6+ into Mo5+ states and slow but simultaneous formation of Mo4+ states. We measure the decrease in oxygen/metal ratio in the thin film explaining the limited reversibility of hydrogen sensors based on transition metal oxides. The results also enlighten the recent debate on the mechanism of the high temperature hydrogen reduction of bulk molybdenum oxide. The specific mechanism is a result of the balance between the reduction by hydrogen and water formation, desorption of water as well as nucleation and growth of new phases.
Science and Technology of Advanced Materials | 2016
Mohammed Makha; Silvia Leticia Fernandes; Sandra Jenatsch; Ton Offermans; Jürg Schleuniger; Jean-Nicolas Tisserant; Anna C. Véron; Roland Hany
Abstract A simple lamination process of the top electrode for perovskite solar cells is demonstrated. The laminate electrode consists of a transparent and conductive plastic/metal mesh substrate, coated with an adhesive mixture of poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonate), PEDOT:PSS, and sorbitol. The laminate electrode showed a high degree of transparency of 85%. Best cell performance was achieved for laminate electrodes prepared with a sorbitol concentration of ~30 wt% per milliliter PEDOT:PSS dispersion, and using a pre-annealing temperature of 120°C for 10 min before lamination. Thereby, perovskite solar cells with stabilized power conversion efficiencies of (7.6 ± 1.0)% were obtained which corresponds to 80% of the reference devices with reflective opaque gold electrodes.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016
Sandra Jenatsch; Lei Wang; Matia Bulloni; Anna C. Véron; Beat Ruhstaller; Stéphane Altazin; Frank Nüesch; Roland Hany
Cyanine dyes are fluorescent organic salts with intrinsic conductivity for ionic and electronic charges. Recently ( J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2013 , 135 , 18008 - 18011 ), these features have been exploited in cyanine light-emitting electrochemical cells (LECs). Here, we demonstrate that stacked, constant-voltage driven trimethine cyanine LECs with various counteranions develop a p-i-n junction that is composed of p- and n-doped zones and an intrinsic region where light-emission occurs. We introduce a method that combines spectral photocurrent response measurements with optical modeling and find that at maximum current the intrinsic region is centered at ∼37% away from the anode. Transient capacitance, photoluminescence and attenuance experiments indicate a device situation with a narrow p-doped region, an undoped region that occupies ∼72% of the dye layer thickness and an n-doped region with a maximum doping concentration of 0.08 dopant/cyanine molecule. Finally, we observe that during device relaxation the parent cyanines are not reformed. We ascribe this to irreversible reactions between doped cyanine radicals. For sterically conservative cyanine dyes, this suggests that undesired radical decomposition pathways limit the LEC long-term stability in general.
ACS Nano | 2014
Jean-Nicolas Tisserant; Rolf Brönnimann; Roland Hany; Sandra Jenatsch; Frank Nüesch; Raffaele Mezzenga; Gian-Luca Bona; Jakob Heier
Small organic semiconducting molecules assembling into supramolecular J- and H- aggregates have attracted much attention due to outstanding optoelectronic properties. However, their easy and reproducible fabrication is not yet sufficiently developed for industrial applications, except for silver halide photography. Here we present a method based on aggregate precipitation during the phase separation and dewetting of the evaporating dye precursor solution. The smaller the precursor droplets, the more pronounced the J-aggregation. The aggregates cause the films to resonantly scatter incoming light. Because the dye aggregate extinction resonances have narrowest bandwidths, a wavelength selectivity is observed that exceeds the selectivity of localized surface plasmon resonances. The aggregation mechanism can be easily applied to periodically structured substrates, making the method appealing for photonic applications. We demonstrate this point with a 2D grating, where the narrow absorption range of the aggregates leads to wavelength specific (one color only) scattering.
Science and Technology of Advanced Materials | 2015
Sandra Jenatsch; Thomas Geiger; Jakob Heier; Christoph Kirsch; Frank Nüesch; Adriana Paracchino; Daniel Rentsch; Beat Ruhstaller; Anna C. Véron; Roland Hany
Abstract Simple bilayer organic solar cells rely on very thin coated films that allow for effective light absorption and charge carrier transport away from the heterojunction at the same time. However, thin films are difficult to coat on rough substrates or over large areas, resulting in adverse shorting and low device fabrication yield. Chemical p-type doping of organic semiconductors can reduce Ohmic losses in thicker transport layers through increased conductivity. By using a Co(III) complex as chemical dopant, we studied doped cyanine dye/C60 bilayer solar cell performance for increasing dye film thickness. For films thicker than 50 nm, doping increased the power conversion efficiency by more than 30%. At the same time, the yield of working cells increased to 80%. We addressed the fate of the doped cyanine dye, and found no influence of doping on solar cell long term stability.
Science and Technology of Advanced Materials | 2017
Mohammed Makha; Paolo Testa; Surendra B. Anantharaman; Jakob Heier; Sandra Jenatsch; Nicolas Leclaire; Jean-Nicolas Tisserant; Anna C. Véron; Lei Wang; Frank Nüesch; Roland Hany
Abstract Tinted and colour-neutral semitransparent organic photovoltaic elements are of interest for building-integrated applications in windows, on glass roofs or on facades. We demonstrate a semitransparent organic photovoltaic cell with a dry-laminated top electrode that achieves a uniform average visible transmittance of 51% and a power conversion efficiency of 3%. The photo-active material is based on a majority blend composed of a visibly absorbing donor polymer and a fullerene acceptor, to which a selective near-infrared absorbing cyanine dye is added as a minority component. Our results show that organic ternary blends are attractive for the fabrication of semitransparent solar cells in general, because a guest component with a complementary absorption can compensate for the inevitably reduced current generation capability of a high-performing binary blend when applied as a thin, semitransparent film.
Advanced Science | 2018
Donatas Gesevičius; Antonia Neels; Sandra Jenatsch; Erwin Hack; Lucas Viani; Stavros Athanasopoulos; Frank Nüesch; Jakob Heier
Abstract A symmetrical cyanine dye chromophore is modified with different counteranions to study the effect on crystal packing, polarizability, thermal stability, optical properties, light absorbing layer morphology, and organic photovoltaic (OPV) device parameters. Four sulfonate‐based anions and the bulky bistriflylimide anion are introduced to the 2‐[5‐(1,3‐dihydro‐1,3,3‐trimethyl‐2H‐indol‐2‐ylidene)‐1,3‐pentadien‐1‐yl]‐1,3,3‐trimethyl‐3H‐indolium chromophore using an Amberlyst A26 (OH− form) anion exchanger. Anionic charge distribution clearly correlates with device performance, whereby an average efficiency of 2% was reached in a standard bilayer organic solar. Evidence is given that the negative charge of the anion distributed over a large number of atoms is significantly more important than the size of the organic moieties of the sulfonate charge carrying group. This provides a clear strategy for future design of more efficient cyanine dyes for OPV applications.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018
Maciej Kawecki; Roland Hany; Matthias Diethelm; Sandra Jenatsch; Quirin Grossmann; Laetitia Bernard; Hans J. Hug
The redistribution of ions in light-emitting electrochemical cells (LECs) plays a key role in their functionality. The direct quantitative mapping of ion density distributions in operating realistic sandwich-type devices, however, has not been experimentally achieved. Here we operate high-performing [Super Yellow/trimethylolpropane ethoxylate/lithium trifluoromethanesulfonate (Li+CF3SO3-)] LEC devices inside a time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometer and cool the devices after different operation times to liquid nitrogen temperatures before depth profiling is performed. The results reveal the dependence of the elemental and molecular distributions across the device layer on operation conditions. We find that the ion displacements lead to a substantial shift of the local chemical equilibria governing the free ion concentration.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Andrius Devižis; Jelissa De Jonghe-Risse; Roland Hany; Frank Nüesch; Sandra Jenatsch; Vidmantas Gulbinas; Jacques-E. Moser
Collaboration
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Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
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View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
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