Unsal Koldemir
Stanford University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Unsal Koldemir.
Nano Letters | 2014
Sefaattin Tongay; Wen Fan; Jun Kang; Joonsuk Park; Unsal Koldemir; Joonki Suh; Deepa S. Narang; Kai Liu; Jie Ji; Jingbo Li; Robert Sinclair; J. Wu
Band offsets between different monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides are expected to efficiently separate charge carriers or rectify charge flow, offering a mechanism for designing atomically thin devices and probing exotic two-dimensional physics. However, developing such large-area heterostructures has been hampered by challenges in synthesis of monolayers and effectively coupling neighboring layers. Here, we demonstrate large-area (>tens of micrometers) heterostructures of CVD-grown WS2 and MoS2 monolayers, where the interlayer interaction is externally tuned from noncoupling to strong coupling. Following this trend, the luminescence spectrum of the heterostructures evolves from an additive line profile where each layer contributes independently to a new profile that is dictated by charge transfer and band normalization between the WS2 and MoS2 layers. These results and findings open up venues to creating new material systems with rich functionalities and novel physical effects.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2012
Chad M. Amb; Michael R. Craig; Unsal Koldemir; Jegadesan Subbiah; Kaushik Roy Choudhury; Suren A. Gevorgyan; Mikkel Jørgensen; Frederik C. Krebs; Franky So; John R. Reynolds
The practical application of organic photovoltaic (OPV) cells requires high throughput printing techniques in order to attain cells with an area large enough to provide useful amounts of power. However, in the laboratory screening of new materials for OPVs, spin-coating is used almost exclusively as a thin-film deposition technique due its convenience. We report on the significant differences between the spin-coating of laboratory solar cells and slot-die coating of a blue-green colored, low bandgap polymer (PGREEN). This is one of the first demonstrations of slot-die-coated polymer solar cells OPVs not utilizing poly(3-hexylthiophene):(6,6)-phenyl-C(61)-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM) blends as a light absorbing layer. Through synthetic optimization, we show that strict protocols are necessary to yield polymers which achieve consistent photovoltaic behavior. We fabricated spin-coated laboratory scale OPV devices with PGREEN: PCBM blends as active light absorbing layers, and compare performance to slot die-coated individual solar cells, and slot-die-coated solar modules consisting of many cells connected in series. We find that the optimum ratio of polymer to PCBM varies significantly when changing from spin-coating of thinner active layer films to slot-die coating, which requires somewhat thicker films. We also demonstrate the detrimental impacts on power conversion efficiency of high series resistance imparted by large electrodes, illustrating the need for higher conductivity contacts, transparent electrodes, and high mobility active layer materials for large-area solar cell modules.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015
Bradley A. MacLeod; K. Xerxes Steirer; James L. Young; Unsal Koldemir; Alan Sellinger; John A. Turner; Todd Deutsch; Dana C. Olson
The p-type semiconductor GaInP2 has a nearly ideal bandgap (∼1.83 eV) for hydrogen fuel generation by photoelectrochemical water splitting but is unable to drive this reaction because of misalignment of the semiconductor band edges with the water redox half reactions. Here, we show that attachment of an appropriate conjugated phosphonic acid to the GaInP2 electrode surface improves the band edge alignment, closer to the desired overlap with the water redox potentials. We demonstrate that this surface modification approach is able to adjust the energetic position of the band edges by as much as 0.8 eV, showing that it may be possible to engineer the energetics at the semiconductor/electrolyte interface to allow for unbiased water splitting with a single photoelectrode having a bandgap of less than 2 eV.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014
Jennifer L. Braid; Unsal Koldemir; Alan Sellinger; Reuben T. Collins; Thomas E. Furtak; Dana C. Olson
Phosphonic acid modification of zinc oxide (ZnO) electron transport layers in inverted P3HT:ICBA solar cells was studied to determine the effect of conjugated linkages between the aromatic and phosphonic acid attachment groups. For example, zinc oxide treated with 2,6-difluorophenylvinylphosphonic acid, having a conjugated vinyl group connecting the aromatic moiety to the phosphonic acid group, showed a 0.78 eV decrease in the effective work function versus unmodified ZnO, whereas nonconjugated 2,6-difluorophenylethylphosphonic acid resulted in a 0.57 eV decrease, as measured by Kelvin probe. This resulted in an average power conversion efficiency of 5.89% for conjugated 2,6-difluorophenyvinylphosphonic acid modified solar cells, an improvement over unmodified (5.24%) and nonconjugated phosphonic acid modified devices (5.64%), indicating the importance of the conjugated linkage.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015
Unsal Koldemir; Jennifer L. Braid; Amanda Morgenstern; Mark E. Eberhart; Reuben T. Collins; Dana C. Olson; Alan Sellinger
In this Perspective, we provide a brief background on the use of aromatic phosphonic acid modifiers for tuning work functions of transparent conducting oxides, for example, zinc oxide (ZnO) and indium tin oxide (ITO). We then introduce our preliminary results in this area using conjugated phosphonic acid molecules, having a substantially larger range of dipole moments than their unconjugated analogues, leading to the tuning of ZnO and ITO electrodes over a 2 eV range as derived from Kelvin probe measurements. We have found that these work function changes are directly correlated to the magnitude and the direction of the computationally derived molecular dipole of the conjugated phosphonic acids, leading to the predictive power of computation to drive the synthesis of new and improved phosphonic acid ligands.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2011
Unsal Koldemir; Kenneth R. Graham; Danielle H. Salazar; Tracy D. McCarley; John R. Reynolds
We demonstrate the ability of a new alternating polyfluorene (APFO) type polymer employing dialkoxythiophene moieties to operate efficiently as both an electrochromic (EC) and electroluminescent (EL) material, thereby providing for incorporation into a dual EC/EL device. In addition, the new APFO type polymer was blended with PC[70]BM in a bulk heterojunction photovoltaic cell resulting in a power conversion efficiency of 1.66% with a high open circuit voltage of 0.87 volts.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Henok A. Yemam; Adam Mahl; Unsal Koldemir; Tyler Remedes; Sean Parkin; U. Greife; Alan Sellinger
A synthetic methodology is developed to generate boron rich aromatic small molecules based on benzene and pyrene moieties for the detection of thermal neutrons. The prepared aromatic compounds have a relatively high boron content up to 7.4 wt%, which is important for application in neutron detection as 10B (20% of natural abundance boron) has a large neutron induced reaction cross-section. This is demonstrated by preparing blends of the synthesized molecules with fluorescent dopants in poly(vinyltoluene) matrices resulting in comparable scintillation light output and neutron capture as state-of-the art commercial scintillators, but with the advantage of much lower cost. The boron-rich benzene and pyrene derivatives are prepared by Suzuki conditions using both microwave and traditional heating, affording yields of 40–93%. This new procedure is simple and straightforward, and has the potential to be scaled up.
Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2017
Unsal Koldemir; Jonathan S. Tinkham; R. S. Johnson; Bogyu Lim; Henok A. Yemam; Kevin J. Gagnon; Sean Parkin; Alan Sellinger
A series of new polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon compounds based on (4,10-disubstituted-dibenzo[def,mno]chrysene-6,12-dione) and 4,10 di-substituted 6,12-bis(triisopropylsilylethynyl)dibenzo[def,mno]chrysene are reported with tunable electronic properties through varied molecular architecture. Starting with an inexpensive commercially available textile dye known as Vat Orange #3, (4,10-dibromo-dibenzo[def,mno] chrysene-6,12-dione) we extended the conjugation at the 4- and 10-positions by the attachment of both electron rich and deficient hexylvinylphthalimide, thiophene, hexylthiophene, triphenylamine, and hexylbithiophene aromatic groups, and studied the resultant optoelectronic properties. By applying various synthetic metal-catalyzed reactions, soluble dibenzo[def,mno]chrysene and dibenzo[def,mno]chrysene-6,12-dione derivatives were achieved with optical edge band gaps between 2.30 eV and 1.65 eV.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
Kathryn A. O’Hara; David P. Ostrowski; Unsal Koldemir; Christopher J. Takacs; Sean E. Shaheen; Alan Sellinger; Michael L. Chabinyc
Many high efficiency organic photovoltaics use fullerene-based acceptors despite their high production cost, weak optical absorption in the visible range, and limited synthetic variability of electronic and optical properties. To circumvent this deficiency, non-fullerene small-molecule acceptors have been developed that have good synthetic flexibility, allowing for precise tuning of optoelectronic properties, leading to enhanced absorption of the solar spectrum and increased open-circuit voltages (VOC). We examined the detailed morphology of bulk heterojunctions of poly(3-hexylthiophene) and the small-molecule acceptor HPI-BT to reveal structural changes that lead to improvements in the fill factor of solar cells upon thermal annealing. The kinetics of the phase transformation process of HPI-BT during thermal annealing were investigated through in situ grazing incidence wide-angle X-ray scattering studies, atomic force microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy. The HPI-BT acceptor crystallizes during film formation to form micron-sized domains embedded within the film center and a donor rich capping layer at the cathode interface reducing efficient charge extraction. Thermal annealing changes the surface composition and improves charge extraction. This study reveals the need for complementary methods to investigate the morphology of BHJs.
photovoltaic specialists conference | 2014
David P. Ostrowski; Unsal Koldemir; Ryan T. Anderson; Alan Sellinger; Sean E. Shaheen
Solution-processed, bulk-heterojunction Organic Photovoltaic (OPV) devices with a high Voc (up to 1.35 V) were fabricated with a high band gap electron-donor copolymer blended with a small-molecule electron-acceptor. The copolymer (PInCZ), based on carbazole and indolocarbazole monomers, posseses a deep lying HOMO (Highest Occupied Molecular Orbital) of -5.6 eV. Coupling this polymer with the small-molecule acceptor (HPI-BT), with a relatively shallow LUMO (Lowest Occupied Molecular Orbital) near -3.6 eV, resulted in an effective electronic band gap in the donor-acceptor pair of approximately 2.0 eV. This value, which is important in determining the maximum Voc attainable in the device, is substantially higher than the typical values found in OPV devices of ~1.0 - 1.5 eV. In the devices presented here, the thermodynamic loss in energy from the optical band gap compared to the Voc is ~41%, which is substantially lower than that commonly found in OPV materials of 50+%.