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Dive into the research topics where Spyros Gardelis is active.

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Featured researches published by Spyros Gardelis.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2014

Porphyrin oriented self-assembled nanostructures for efficient exciton dissociation in high-performing organic photovoltaics

Maria Vasilopoulou; Dimitra G. Georgiadou; Antonios M. Douvas; Anastasia Soultati; Vassilios Constantoudis; Dimitris Davazoglou; Spyros Gardelis; Leonidas C. Palilis; Mihalis Fakis; S. Kennou; Theodore Lazarides; Athanassios G. Coutsolelos; Panagiotis Argitis

Herein we report on enhanced organic solar cell performance through the incorporation of cathode interfacial layers consisting of self-organized porphyrin nanostructures with a face-on configuration. In particular, a water/methanol-soluble porphyrin molecule, the free base meso-tetrakis(1-methylpyridinium-4-yl)porphyrin chloride, is employed as a novel cathode interlayer in bulk heterojunction organic photovoltaics. It is demonstrated that the self-organization of this porphyrin compound into aggregates in which molecules adopt a face-to-face orientation parallel to the organic semiconducting substrate induces a large local interfacial electric field that results in a significant enhancement of exciton dissociation. Consequently, enhanced photocurrent and open circuit voltage were obtained resulting in overall device efficiency improvement in organic photovoltaics based on bulk heterojunction mixtures of different polymeric donors and fullerene acceptors, regardless of the specific combination of donor–acceptor employed. To highlight the impact of molecular orientation a second porphyrin compound, the Zn-metallated meso-tetrakis(1-methylpyridinium-4-yl)porphyrin chloride, was also studied and it was found that it forms aggregates with an edge-to-edge molecular configuration inducing a smaller increase in the device performance.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2016

Surface passivation effect by fluorine plasma treatment on ZnO for efficiency and lifetime improvement of inverted polymer solar cells

Ermioni Polydorou; Angelos Zeniou; Dimitrios Tsikritzis; Anastasia Soultati; I. Sakellis; Spyros Gardelis; Theodoros A. Papadopoulos; Joe Briscoe; Leonidas C. Palilis; S. Kennou; Evangelos Gogolides; Panagiotis Argitis; Dimitrios Davazoglou; Maria Vasilopoulou

Zinc oxide (ZnO) is an important material for polymer solar cells (PSCs) where the characteristics of the interface can dominate both the efficiency and lifetime of the device. In this work we study the effect of fluorine (SF6) plasma surface treatment of ZnO films on the performance of PSCs with an inverted structure. The interaction between fluorine species present in the SF6 plasma and the ZnO surface is also investigated in detail. We provide fundamental insights into the passivation effect of fluorine by analyzing our experimental results and theoretical calculations and we propose a mechanism according to which a fluorine atom substitutes an oxygen atom or occupies an oxygen vacancy site eliminating an electron trap while it may also attract hydrogen atoms thus favoring hydrogen doping. These multiple fluorine roles can reduce both the recombination losses and the electron extraction barrier at the ZnO/fullerene interface improving the selectivity of the cathode contact. Therefore, the fabricated devices using the fluorine plasma treated ZnO show high efficiency and stable characteristics, irrespective of the donor : acceptor combinations in the photoactive blend. Inverted polymer solar cells, consisting of the P3HT:PC71BM blend, exhibited increased lifetime and high power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 4.6%, while the ones with the PCDTBT:PC71BM blend exhibited a PCE of 6.9%. Our champion devices with the PTB7:PC71BM blends reached a high PCE of 8.0% and simultaneously showed exceptional environmental stability when using the fluorine passivated ZnO cathode interlayers.


Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2017

A silanol-functionalized polyoxometalate with excellent electron transfer mediating behavior to ZnO and TiO 2 cathode interlayers for highly efficient and extremely stable polymer solar cells

Marinos Tountas; Yasemin Topal; Apostolis Verykios; Anastasia Soultati; Andreas Kaltzoglou; Theodoros A. Papadopoulos; Florian Auras; Kostas Seintis; Mihalis Fakis; Leonidas C. Palilis; Dimitris Tsikritzis; S. Kennou; Azhar Fakharuddin; Lukas Schmidt-Mende; Spyros Gardelis; Mahmut Kus; Polycarpos Falaras; Dimitris Davazoglou; Panagiotis Argitis; Maria Vasilopoulou

Combining high efficiency and long lifetime under ambient conditions still poses a major challenge towards commercialization of polymer solar cells. Here we report a facile strategy that can simultaneously enhance the efficiency and temporal stability of inverted photovoltaic architectures. Inclusion of a silanol-functionalized organic–inorganic hybrid polyoxometalate derived from a PW9O34 lacunary phosphotungstate anion, namely (nBu4N)3[PW9O34(tBuSiOH)3], significantly increases the effectiveness of the electron collecting interface, which consists of a metal oxide such as titanium dioxide or zinc oxide, and leads to a high efficiency of 6.51% for single-junction structures based on poly(3-hexylthiophene):indene-C60 bisadduct (P3HT:IC60BA) blends. The above favourable outcome stems from a large decrease in the work function, an effective surface passivation and a decrease in the surface energy of metal oxides which synergistically result in the outstanding electron transfer mediating capability of the functionalized polyoxometalate. In addition, the insertion of a silanol-functionalized polyoxometalate layer significantly enhances the ambient stability of unencapsulated devices which retain nearly 90% of their original efficiencies (T90) after 1000 hours.


Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2016

Dehydration of molybdenum oxide hole extraction layers via microwave annealing for the improvement of efficiency and lifetime in organic solar cells

Anastasia Soultati; Ioannis Kostis; Panagiotis Argitis; Dimitra Dimotikali; S. Kennou; Spyros Gardelis; Thanassis Speliotis; Athanassios G. Kontos; Dimitris Davazoglou; Maria Vasilopoulou

A significant contribution to the improvement of efficiency and lifetime of organic solar cells is due to the successful engineering of the metal contact/organic interface by introducing appropriate interlayers. In the current work we show that a short microwave post-annealing treatment in air of an under-stoichiometric molybdenum oxide (MoOx) hole transport layer significantly enhanced the performance and lifetime of an organic solar cell based on a poly(3-hexylthiophene):[6,6]-phenyl-C71-butyric acid methyl ester (P3HT:PC71BM) blend. The enhanced performance is mainly driven by improvement in the short circuit current (Jsc) and the fill factor (FF), caused by, except for an increase of the anode work function, reduced series resistance, and increased shunt resistance and also higher charge generation efficiency, reduced recombination losses and improved hole transport towards the anode contact. In addition, the lifetime of the devices with microwave annealed MoOx interlayers was also significantly improved compared to those with as-deposited MoOx and, especially, those with the PEDOT-PSS interlayer. The above were attributed to effective dehydration which was also followed by structural transformation and crystallization of the MoOx layer during microwave annealing. The removal of absorbed water molecules led to alterations of the structure and microstructure of the MoOx films, visible in the X-ray diffraction patterns, infrared and Raman spectra and atomic force microscopy images recorded on their surface without influencing the oxides chemical composition as evidenced by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. During microwave annealing the substrate remains practically at room temperature, so the method is applicable for films deposited on plastics or other temperature-sensitive substrates.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018

Engineering of Porphyrin Molecules for Use as Effective Cathode Interfacial Modifiers in Organic Solar Cells of Enhanced Efficiency and Stability

Marinos Tountas; Apostolis Verykios; Ermioni Polydorou; Andreas Kaltzoglou; Anastasia Soultati; Nikolaos Balis; Panagiotis A. Angaridis; Michael Papadakis; Vasilis Nikolaou; Florian Auras; Leonidas C. Palilis; Dimitris Tsikritzis; E.K. Evangelou; Spyros Gardelis; Matroni Koutsoureli; George Papaioannou; Ioannis D. Petsalakis; S. Kennou; Dimitris Davazoglou; Panagiotis Argitis; Polycarpos Falaras; Athanassios G. Coutsolelos; Maria Vasilopoulou

In the present work, we effectively modify the TiO2 electron transport layer of organic solar cells with an inverted architecture using appropriately engineered porphyrin molecules. The results show that the optimized porphyrin modifier bearing two carboxylic acids as the anchoring groups and a triazine electron-withdrawing spacer significantly reduces the work function of TiO2, thereby reducing the electron extraction barrier. Moreover, the lower surface energy of the porphyrin-modified substrate results in better physical compatibility between the latter and the photoactive blend. Upon employing porphyrin-modified TiO2 electron transport layers in PTB7:PC71BM-based organic solar cells we obtained an improved average power conversion efficiency up to 8.73%. Importantly, porphyrin modification significantly increased the lifetime of the devices, which retained 80% of their initial efficiency after 500 h of storage in the dark. Because of its simplicity and efficacy, this approach should give tantalizing glimpses and generate an impact into the potential of porphyrins to facilitate electron transfer in organic solar cells and related devices.


Advanced Energy Materials | 2014

Solution‐Processed Hydrogen Molybdenum Bronzes as Highly Conductive Anode Interlayers in Efficient Organic Photovoltaics

Anastasia Soultati; Antonios M. Douvas; Dimitra G. Georgiadou; Leonidas C. Palilis; Thomas Bein; Johann M. Feckl; Spyros Gardelis; Mihalis Fakis; S. Kennou; Polycarpos Falaras; Thomas Stergiopoulos; Nikolaos A. Stathopoulos; Dimitris Davazoglou; Panagiotis Argitis; Maria Vasilopoulou


Advanced Energy Materials | 2014

Atomic‐Layer‐Deposited Aluminum and Zirconium Oxides for Surface Passivation of TiO2 in High‐Efficiency Organic Photovoltaics

Maria Vasilopoulou; Dimitra G. Georgiadou; Anastasia Soultati; Nikos Boukos; Spyros Gardelis; Leonidas C. Palilis; Mihalis Fakis; Georgios Skoulatakis; S. Kennou; Martha A. Botzakaki; S. N. Georga; C. A. Krontiras; Florian Auras; Dina Fattakhova-Rohlfing; Thomas Bein; Theodoros A. Papadopoulos; Dimitrios Davazoglou; Panagiotis Argitis


Applied Catalysis B-environmental | 2019

Titania photonic crystal photocatalysts functionalized by graphene oxide nanocolloids

Angeliki Diamantopoulou; Elias Sakellis; George E. Romanos; Spyros Gardelis; Nikolaos Ioannidis; Nikolaos Boukos; Polycarpos Falaras; Vlassis Likodimos


ACS Omega | 2018

Functionalized Zinc Porphyrins with Various Peripheral Groups for Interfacial Electron Injection Barrier Control in Organic Light Emitting Diodes

Apostolis Verykios; Michael Papadakis; Anastasia Soultati; Maria-Christina Skoulikidou; George Papaioannou; Spyros Gardelis; Ioannis D. Petsalakis; Giannoula Theodorakopoulos; Vasilis Petropoulos; Leonidas C. Palilis; Mihalis Fakis; Nikolaos Vainos; Dimitris Alexandropoulos; Dimitris Davazoglou; George Pistolis; Panagiotis Argitis; Athanassios G. Coutsolelos; Maria Vasilopoulou


ACS Applied Energy Materials | 2018

Triazine-Substituted Zinc Porphyrin as an Electron Transport Interfacial Material for Efficiency Enhancement and Degradation Retardation in Planar Perovskite Solar Cells

Nikolaos Balis; Apostolis Verykios; Anastasia Soultati; Vassilios Constantoudis; Michael Papadakis; Fotis Kournoutas; Charalampos Drivas; Maria-Christina Skoulikidou; Spyros Gardelis; Mihalis Fakis; S. Kennou; Athanassios G. Kontos; Athanassios G. Coutsolelos; Polycarpos Falaras; Maria Vasilopoulou

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Anastasia Soultati

National Technical University of Athens

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Polycarpos Falaras

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Antonios M. Douvas

National Technical University of Athens

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