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Dive into the research topics where Yen-Chang Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by Yen-Chang Chen.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2016

Nature inspiring processing route toward high throughput production of perovskite photovoltaics

Hidetaka Ishihara; Som Sarang; Yen-Chang Chen; Oliver Lin; Pisrut Phummirat; Lai Thung; Jose Hernandez; Sayantani Ghosh; Vincent Tung

We report our results of developing perovskite thin films with high coverage, improved uniformity and preserved crystalline continuity in a single pass deposition. This approach, inspired by the natural phenomena of tears of wine, works by regulating the hydrodynamics of the material comprising of droplets during spray-pyrolysis. In contrast to conventional spray-pyrolysis where droplets dry independently and form a rough morphology, the use of binary solvent system creates localized surface tension gradients that initiate Marangoni flows, thus directing the incoming droplets to spontaneously undergo coalescing, merging and spreading into a continuous wet films before drying. By systematically exploring the dynamics of spreading and drying, we achieve spray-coated perovskite photovoltaics with power conversion efficiency of 14.2%, a near two-fold improvement than that of the spray-pyrolysis counterpart. Of particular significance is the fact that the single pass deposition technique unveils novel inroads in efficient management of lead consumption during deposition.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Electrohydrodynamic-assisted Assembly of Hierarchically Structured, 3D Crumpled Nanostructures for Efficient Solar Conversions

Hidetaka Ishihara; Yen-Chang Chen; Nicholas De Marco; Oliver Lin; Chih-Meng Huang; Vipawee Limsakoune; Yi-Chia Chou; Yang Yang; Vincent Tung

The tantalizing prospect of harnessing the unique properties of graphene crumpled nanostructures continues to fuel tremendous interest in energy storage and harvesting applications. However, the paper ball-like, hard texture, and closed-sphere morphology of current 3D graphitic nanostructure production not only constricts the conductive pathways but also limits the accessible surface area. Here, we report new insights into electrohydrodynamically-generated droplets as colloidal nanoreactors in that the stimuli-responsive nature of reduced graphene oxide can lead to the formation of crumpled nanostructures with a combination of open structures and doubly curved, saddle-shaped edges. In particular, the crumpled nanostructures dynamically adapt to non-spherical, polyhedral shapes under continuous deposition, ultimately assembling into foam-like microstructures with a highly accessible surface area and spatially interconnected transport pathways. The implementation of such crumpled nanostructures as three-dimensional rear contacts for solar conversion applications realize benefits of a high aspect ratio, electrically addressable and energetically favorable interfaces, and substantial enhancement of both short-circuit currents and fill-factors compared to those made of planar graphene counterparts. Further, the 3D crumpled nanostructures may shed lights onto the development of effective electrocatalytic electrodes due to their open structure that simultaneously allows for efficient water flow and hydrogen escape.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016

Low temperature excitonic spectroscopy and dynamics as a probe of quality in hybrid perovskite thin films

Som Sarang; Hidetaka Ishihara; Yen-Chang Chen; Oliver Lin; Ajay Gopinathan; Vincent Tung; Sayantani Ghosh

We have developed a framework for using temperature dependent static and dynamic photoluminescence (PL) of hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites (PVSKs) to characterize lattice defects in thin films, based on the presence of nanodomains at low temperature. Our high-stability PVSK films are fabricated using a novel continuous liquid interface propagation technique, and in the tetragonal phase (T > 120 K), they exhibit bi-exponential recombination from free charge carriers with an average PL lifetime of ∼200 ns. Below 120 K, the emergence of the orthorhombic phase is accompanied by a reduction in lifetimes by an order of magnitude, which we establish to be the result of a crossover from free carrier to exciton-dominated radiative recombination. Analysis of the PL as a function of excitation power at different temperatures provides direct evidence that the exciton binding energy is different in the two phases, and using these results, we present a theoretical approach to estimate this variable binding energy. Our findings explain this anomalous low temperature behavior for the first time, attributing it to an inherent fundamental property of the hybrid PVSKs that can be used as an effective probe of thin film quality.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2018

High-throughput label-free microcontact printing graphene-based biosensor for valley fever

Shih-Ming Tsai; Tyler Goshia; Yen-Chang Chen; Agnes Kagiri; Angelo Sibal; Meng-Hsuen Chiu; Anand Gadre; Vincent Tung; Wei-Chun Chin

The highly prevalent and virulent disease in the Western Hemisphere Coccidioidomycosis, also known as Valley Fever, can cause serious illness such as severe pneumonia with respiratory failure. It can also take on a disseminated form where the infection spreads throughout the body. Thus, a serious impetus exists to develop effective detection of the disease that can also operate in a rapid and high-throughput fashion. Here, we report the assembly of a highly sensitive biosensor using reduced graphene oxide (rGO) with Coccidioides(cocci) antibodies as the target analytes. The facile design made possible by the scalable microcontact printing (μCP) surface patterning technique which enables rapid, ultrasensitive detection. It provides a wide linear range and sub picomolar (2.5 pg/ml) detection, while also delivering high selectivity and reproducibility. This work demonstrates an important advancement in the development of a sensitive label-free rGO biosensor for Coccidioidomycosis detection. This result also provides the potential application of direct pathogen diagnosis for the future biosensor development.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Photovoltaic and optical properties of perovskite thin films fabricated using Marangoni flow assisted electrospraying.

Som Sarang; Hidetaka Ishihara; Yen-Chang Chen; Oliver Lin; Vincent Tung; Sayantani Ghosh

We have developed an electrospraying technique inspired from Marangoni flow seen in nature. We demonstrate our ability to synthesise highly crystalline uniform perovskite thin films with enhanced coverage and high absorption. Due to a difference in the vapour pressure of DMSO and NMP, a gradient force is developed that helps in propagating the incoming precursor droplet to coalesce and merge with other droplets thus inducing a dynamic self-assembly within the thin film. This results in thin films with high uniformity and good morphological and topological characteristics, that collectivelty resulted in a respectable PCE of greater than 14%. Optical studies are conducted in parallel to better understand the energy phase space of perovskite crystals. The high temperature tetragonal phase showed a high recombination rate of 180 ns, ideal for photovoltaic performances, while the low temperature measurements reveal considerable complexity in spectral and dynamic properties that demand further invesgtiation.


Advanced Materials Interfaces | 2016

Electrohydrodynamically Assisted Deposition of Efficient Perovskite Photovoltaics

Hidetaka Ishihara; Wenjun Chen; Yen-Chang Chen; Som Sarang; Nicholas De Marco; Oliver Lin; Sayantani Ghosh; Vincent Tung


Advanced Materials Interfaces | 2015

Capillarity‐Assisted Electrostatic Assembly of Hierarchically Functional 3D Graphene: TiO2 Hybrid Photoanodes

Yen-Chang Chen; Hidetaka Ishihara; Wenjun Chen; Nicholas DeMarco; Andrew Siordia; Yongsheng Sun; Oliver Lin; Chih-Wei Chu; Vincent Tung


Journal of Solid State Chemistry | 2015

Flexible all-carbon photovoltaics with improved thermal stability

Chun Tang; Hidetaka Ishihara; Jaskiranjeet Sodhi; Yen-Chang Chen; Andrew Siordia; Ashlie Martini; Vincent Tung


Advanced Materials | 2017

Bioinspired Dimensional Transition: Structurally Deformed MoS2 for Electrochemically Stable, Thermally Resistant, and Highly Efficient Hydrogen Evolution Reaction (Adv. Mater. 44/2017)

Yen-Chang Chen; Ang-Yu Lu; Ping Lu; Xiulin Yang; Chang‐Ming Jiang; Marina Mariano; Bryan Kaehr; Oliver Lin; André D. Taylor; Ian D. Sharp; Lain-Jong Li; Stanley S. Chou; Vincent Tung


Advanced Materials Interfaces | 2016

Photovoltaics: Electrohydrodynamically Assisted Deposition of Efficient Perovskite Photovoltaics (Adv. Mater. Interfaces 9/2016)

Hidetaka Ishihara; Wenjun Chen; Yen-Chang Chen; Som Sarang; Nicholas De Marco; Oliver Lin; Sayantani Ghosh; Vincent Tung

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Vincent Tung

University of California

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Oliver Lin

University of California

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Som Sarang

University of California

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Wenjun Chen

University of California

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Andrew Siordia

University of California

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