Tudor H. Thomas
University of Cambridge
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tudor H. Thomas.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014
Aditya Sadhanala; Felix Deschler; Tudor H. Thomas; Sian Elizabeth Dutton; Karl Goedel; Fabian C. Hanusch; May L. Lai; Ullrich Steiner; Thomas Bein; Pablo Docampo; David Cahen; Richard H. Friend
Organometallic lead-halide perovskite-based solar cells now approach 18% efficiency. Introducing a mixture of bromide and iodide in the halide composition allows tuning of the optical bandgap. We prepare mixed bromide-iodide lead perovskite films CH3NH3Pb(I1-xBrx)3 (0 ≤ x ≤ 1) by spin-coating from solution and obtain films with monotonically varying bandgaps across the full composition range. Photothermal deflection spectroscopy, photoluminescence, and X-ray diffraction show that following suitable fabrication protocols these mixed lead-halide perovskite films form a single phase. The optical absorption edge of the pure triiodide and tribromide perovskites is sharp with Urbach energies of 15 and 23 meV, respectively, and reaches a maximum of 90 meV for CH3NH3PbI1.2Br1.8. We demonstrate a bromide-iodide lead perovskite film (CH3NH3PbI1.2Br1.8) with an optical bandgap of 1.94 eV, which is optimal for tandem cells of these materials with crystalline silicon devices.
Science Advances | 2017
Satyaprasad P. Senanayak; Bingyan Yang; Tudor H. Thomas; Nadja Giesbrecht; Wenchao Huang; Eliot Gann; Bhaskaran Nair; Karl Goedel; Suchi Guha; Xavier Moya; Christopher R. McNeill; Pablo Docampo; Aditya Sadhanala; Richard H. Friend; Henning Sirringhaus
Band-like charge transport is observed in lead halide perovskite field-effect transistors. Fundamental understanding of the charge transport physics of hybrid lead halide perovskite semiconductors is important for advancing their use in high-performance optoelectronics. We use field-effect transistors (FETs) to probe the charge transport mechanism in thin films of methylammonium lead iodide (MAPbI3). We show that through optimization of thin-film microstructure and source-drain contact modifications, it is possible to significantly minimize instability and hysteresis in FET characteristics and demonstrate an electron field-effect mobility (μFET) of 0.5 cm2/Vs at room temperature. Temperature-dependent transport studies revealed a negative coefficient of mobility with three different temperature regimes. On the basis of electrical and spectroscopic studies, we attribute the three different regimes to transport limited by ion migration due to point defects associated with grain boundaries, polarization disorder of the MA+ cations, and thermal vibrations of the lead halide inorganic cages.
Science | 2017
Dawei Di; Alexander S. Romanov; Le Yang; Johannes M. Richter; Jasmine P. H. Rivett; Saul T. E. Jones; Tudor H. Thomas; Mojtaba Abdi Jalebi; Richard H. Friend; Mikko Linnolahti; Manfred Bochmann; Dan Credgington
Adding a twist for enhanced performance The efficiency of organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) is fundamentally governed by the ratio of emissive singlet to dark triplet excitons that are formed from spin-polarized electron and hole currents within the material. Typically, this has set an upper limit of 25% internal quantum efficiency for OLEDs. Di et al. manipulated the ratio of spin states through a modification of process chemistry. They introduced a rotation of the molecular structure, which inverted the spin-state energetics and enhanced OLED performance. Science, this issue p. 159 Spin-state inversion via intramolecular rotation can enhance the performance of solution-processed organic light-emitting diodes. Organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) promise highly efficient lighting and display technologies. We introduce a new class of linear donor-bridge-acceptor light-emitting molecules, which enable solution-processed OLEDs with near-100% internal quantum efficiency at high brightness. Key to this performance is their rapid and efficient utilization of triplet states. Using time-resolved spectroscopy, we establish that luminescence via triplets occurs within 350 nanoseconds at ambient temperature, after reverse intersystem crossing to singlets. We find that molecular geometries exist at which the singlet-triplet energy gap (exchange energy) is close to zero, so that rapid interconversion is possible. Calculations indicate that exchange energy is tuned by relative rotation of the donor and acceptor moieties about the bridge. Unlike other systems with low exchange energy, substantial oscillator strength is sustained at the singlet-triplet degeneracy point.
ACS Nano | 2017
Limeng Ni; Uyen Huynh; Alexandre Georges Cheminal; Tudor H. Thomas; Ravichandran Shivanna; Ture F. Hinrichsen; Shahab Ahmad; Aditya Sadhanala; Akshay Rao
Self-assembled hybrid perovskite quantum wells have attracted attention due to their tunable emission properties, ease of fabrication, and device integration. However, the dynamics of excitons in these materials, especially how they couple to phonons, remains an open question. Here, we investigate two widely used materials, namely, butylammonium lead iodide (CH3(CH2)3NH3)2PbI4 and hexylammonium lead iodide (CH3(CH2)5NH3)2PbI4, both of which exhibit broad photoluminescence tails at room temperature. We performed femtosecond vibrational spectroscopy to obtain a real-time picture of the exciton-phonon interaction and directly identified the vibrational modes that couple to excitons. We show that the choice of the organic cation controls which vibrational modes the exciton couples to. In butylammonium lead iodide, excitons dominantly couple to a 100 cm-1 phonon mode, whereas in hexylammonium lead iodide, excitons interact with phonons with frequencies of 88 and 137 cm-1. Using the determined optical phonon energies, we analyzed photoluminescence broadening mechanisms. At low temperatures (<100 K), the broadening is due to acoustic phonon scattering, whereas at high temperatures, LO phonon-exciton coupling is the dominant mechanism. Our results help explain the broad photoluminescence line shape observed in hybrid perovskite quantum wells and provide insights into the mechanism of exciton-phonon coupling in these materials.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Edward P. Booker; Tudor H. Thomas; Claudio Quarti; Michael Stanton; Cameron D Dashwood; Alexander Gillett; Johannes M. Richter; Andrew J. Pearson; Nathaniel J. L. K. Davis; Henning Sirringhaus; Michael Price; Neil C. Greenham; David Beljonne; Sian Elizabeth Dutton; Felix Deschler
We investigate the origin of the broadband visible emission in layered hybrid lead-halide perovskites and its connection with structural and photophysical properties. We study ⟨001⟩ oriented thin films of hexylammonium (HA) lead iodide, (C6H16N)2PbI4, and dodecylammonium (DA) lead iodide, (C12H28N)2PbI4, by combining first-principles simulations with time-resolved photoluminescence, steady-state absorption and X-ray diffraction measurements on cooling from 300 to 4 K. Ultrafast transient absorption and photoluminescence measurements are used to track the formation and recombination of emissive states. In addition to the excitonic photoluminescence near the absorption edge, we find a red-shifted, broadband (full-width at half-maximum of about 0.4 eV), emission band below 200 K, similar to emission from ⟨110⟩ oriented bromide 2D perovskites at room temperature. The lifetime of this sub-band-gap emission exceeds that of the excitonic transition by orders of magnitude. We use X-ray diffraction measurements to study the changes in crystal lattice with temperature. We report changes in the octahedral tilt and lattice spacing in both materials, together with a phase change around 200 K in DA2PbI4. DFT simulations of the HA2PbI4 crystal structure indicate that the low-energy emission is due to interstitial iodide and related Frenkel defects. Our results demonstrate that white-light emission is not limited to ⟨110⟩ oriented bromide 2D perovskites but a general property of this class of system, and highlight the importance of defect control for the formation of low-energy emissive sites, which can provide a pathway to design tailored white-light emitters.
Nature Communications | 2018
Muyang Ban; Yatao Zou; Jasmine P. H. Rivett; Yingguo Yang; Tudor H. Thomas; Yeshu Tan; Tao Song; Xingyu Gao; Dan Credington; Felix Deschler; Henning Sirringhaus; Baoquan Sun
Organometal halide perovskites (OHP) are promising materials for low-cost, high-efficiency light-emitting diodes. In films with a distribution of two-dimensional OHP nanosheets and small three-dimensional nanocrystals, an energy funnel can be realized that concentrates the excitations in highly efficient radiative recombination centers. However, this energy funnel is likely to contain inefficient pathways as the size distribution of nanocrystals, the phase separation between the OHP and the organic phase. Here, we demonstrate that the OHP crystallite distribution and phase separation can be precisely controlled by adding a molecule that suppresses crystallization of the organic phase. We use these improved material properties to achieve OHP light-emitting diodes with an external quantum efficiency of 15.5%. Our results demonstrate that through the addition of judiciously selected molecular additives, sufficient carrier confinement with first-order recombination characteristics, and efficient suppression of non-radiative recombination can be achieved while retaining efficient charge transport characteristics.Crystal sizes play a vital role in pushing up the efficiency of organometal halide perovskites based LEDs. Here Ban et al. incorporate a molecular additive to control the crystallite distribution and phase separation in the perovskite devices, resulting in high external quantum efficiency of 15.5%.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018
Raj Pandya; Richard Y. S. Chen; Alexandre Georges Cheminal; Marion Dufour; Johannes M. Richter; Tudor H. Thomas; Shahab Ahmed; Aditya Sadhanala; Edward P. Booker; Giorgio Divitini; Felix Deschler; Neil C. Greenham; Sandrine Ithurria; Akshay Rao
CdSe/CdTe core-crown type-II nanoplatelet heterostructures are two-dimensional semiconductors that have attracted interest for use in light-emitting technologies due to their ease of fabrication, outstanding emission yields, and tunable properties. Despite this, the exciton dynamics of these complex materials, and in particular how they are influenced by phonons, is not yet well understood. Here, we use a combination of femtosecond vibrational spectroscopy, temperature-resolved photoluminescence (PL), and temperature-dependent structural measurements to investigate CdSe/CdTe nanoplatelets with a thickness of four monolayers. We show that charge-transfer (CT) excitons across the CdSe/CdTe interface are formed on two distinct time scales: initially from an ultrafast (∼70 fs) electron transfer and then on longer time scales (∼5 ps) from the diffusion of domain excitons to the interface. We find that the CT excitons are influenced by an interfacial phonon mode at ∼120 cm-1, which localizes them to the interface. Using low-temperature PL spectroscopy we reveal that this same phonon mode is the dominant mechanism in broadening the CT PL. On cooling to 4 K, the total PL quantum yield reaches close to unity, with an ∼85% contribution from CT emission and the remainder from an emissive sub-band-gap state. At room temperature, incomplete diffusion of domain excitons to the interface and scattering between CT excitons and phonons limit the PL quantum yield to ∼50%. Our results provide a detailed picture of the nature of exciton-phonon interactions at the interfaces of 2D heterostructures and explain both the broad shape of the CT PL spectrum and the origin of PL quantum yield losses. Furthermore, they suggest that to maximize the PL quantum yield both improved engineering of the interfacial crystal structure and diffusion of domain excitons to the interface, e.g., by altering the relative core/crown size, are required.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018
Raj Pandya; Richard Y. S. Chen; Alexandre Georges Cheminal; Tudor H. Thomas; Arya Thampi; Arelo Tanoh; Johannes M. Richter; Ravichandran Shivanna; Felix Deschler; Christoph Schnedermann; Akshay Rao
Ultrafast vibrational spectroscopy is employed to obtain real-time structural information on energy transport in double-walled light-harvesting nanotubes at room temperature, stabilized in a host matrix to mimic the rigid scaffolds of natural light-harvesting systems. We observe evidence of a low-frequency vibrational mode at 315 cm-1, which transfers excitons from the outer wall of the nanotubes to a crossing point through which energy transfer to the inner wall can occur. This mode is furthermore absent in solution phase. Importantly, the coherence of this mode is not transferred to the inner wall upon energy transfer and is only present on the outer walls excited-state energy surface, highlighting that complete energy transfer between the outer and inner walls does not take place. Isolation of the individual walls of the nanotubes provides evidence that this mode corresponds to a supramolecular motion of the nanotubes. Our results emphasize the importance of the solid-state environment in modulating vibronic coupling and directing energy transfer in molecular light-harvesting systems.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018
Emrys W. Evans; Yoann Olivier; Yuttapoom Puttisong; William K. Myers; Timothy J. H. Hele; S. Matthew Menke; Tudor H. Thomas; Dan Credgington; David Beljonne; Richard H. Friend; Neil C. Greenham
Electrically injected charge carriers in organic light-emitting devices (OLEDs) undergo recombination events to form singlet and triplet states in a 1:3 ratio, representing a fundamental hurdle for achieving high quantum efficiency. Dopants based on thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) have emerged as promising candidates for addressing the spin statistics issue in OLEDs. In these materials, reverse singlet-triplet intersystem crossing (rISC) becomes efficient, thereby activating luminescence pathways for weakly emissive triplet states. However, despite a growing consensus that torsional vibrations facilitate spin-orbit-coupling- (SOC-) driven ISC in these molecules, there is a shortage of experimental evidence. We use transient electron spin resonance and theory to show unambiguously that SOC interactions drive spin conversion and that ISC is a dynamic process gated by conformational fluctuations for benchmark carbazolyl-dicyanobenzene TADF emitters.
Archive | 2017
Dawei Di; Alexander S. Romanov; Le Yang; Johannes M. Richter; Jph Rivett; Saul T. E. Jones; Tudor H. Thomas; Jalebi Mojtaba Abdi; Richard Henry Friend; Mikko Linnolahti; Manfred Bochmann; Dan Credgington
This dataset includes the experimental results of optical spectroscopy (cryogenic transient photoluminescence, transient absorption, ultrafast transient photoluminescence, transient electroluminescence, steady-state emission/absorption and Raman), OLED device characterization, electrochemistry, as well as data associated with quantum chemical (DFT) calculations.