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Dive into the research topics where Yuliar Firdaus is active.

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Featured researches published by Yuliar Firdaus.


Advanced Science | 2018

High‐Efficiency Fullerene Solar Cells Enabled by a Spontaneously Formed Mesostructured CuSCN‐Nanowire Heterointerface

Wai‐Yu Sit; Flurin Eisner; Yen-Hung Lin; Yuliar Firdaus; Akmaral Seitkhan; Ahmed H. Balawi; Frédéric Laquai; Claire H. Burgess; Martyn A. McLachlan; George Volonakis; Feliciano Giustino; Thomas D. Anthopoulos

Abstract Fullerenes and their derivatives are widely used as electron acceptors in bulk‐heterojunction organic solar cells as they combine high electron mobility with good solubility and miscibility with relevant semiconducting polymers. However, studies on the use of fullerenes as the sole photogeneration and charge‐carrier material are scarce. Here, a new type of solution‐processed small‐molecule solar cell based on the two most commonly used methanofullerenes, namely [6,6]‐phenyl‐C61‐butyric acid methyl ester (PC60BM) and [6,6]‐phenyl‐C71‐butyric acid methyl ester (PC70BM), as the light absorbing materials, is reported. First, it is shown that both fullerene derivatives exhibit excellent ambipolar charge transport with balanced hole and electron mobilities. When the two derivatives are spin‐coated over the wide bandgap p‐type semiconductor copper (I) thiocyanate (CuSCN), cells with power conversion efficiency (PCE) of ≈1%, are obtained. Blending the CuSCN with PC70BM is shown to increase the performance further yielding cells with an open‐circuit voltage of ≈0.93 V and a PCE of 5.4%. Microstructural analysis reveals that the key to this success is the spontaneous formation of a unique mesostructured p–n‐like heterointerface between CuSCN and PC70BM. The findings pave the way to an exciting new class of single photoactive material based solar cells.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2018

F-Substituted oligothiophenes serve as nonfullerene acceptors in polymer solar cells with open-circuit voltages >1 V

Tainan Duan; Maxime Babics; Akmaral Seitkhan; Yuliar Firdaus; Ru-Ze Liang; Federico Cruciani; Shengjian Liu; Sergei Lopatin; Pierre M. Beaujuge

We report on a set of two analogous, F-substituted oligothiophene derivatives (D5T6F-M and D7T8F-M), in which systematic fluorination at the thienyl moieties is shown to induce a sufficient increase in electron affinity (EA; i.e. suppressed LUMO level) and in ionization potential (IP; i.e. deeper HOMO) to (i) impart the molecules with electron-accepting and -transporting characteristics, and (ii) yield high open-circuit voltages >1 V in BHJ solar cells when combined with a low-bandgap polymer donor (PCE10) commonly used with fullerenes. The nonfullerene BHJ devices with the SM acceptor D5T6F-M achieve power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) of up to ca. 4.5% (vs. ca. 2% for D7T8F-M-based devices). Our study shows that –F substitutions in SM systems – otherwise used as donors – is an effective approach in the design of nonfullerene acceptors for efficient BHJ solar cells with polymer donors.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2018

Atomic-layer-deposited AZO outperforms ITO in high-efficiency polymer solar cells

Zhipeng Kan; Zhenwei Wang; Yuliar Firdaus; Maxime Babics; Husam N. Alshareef; Pierre M. Beaujuge

Tin-doped indium oxide (ITO) transparent conducting electrodes are widely used across the display industry, and are currently the cornerstone of photovoltaic device developments, taking a substantial share in the manufacturing cost of large-area modules. However, cost and supply considerations are set to limit the extensive use of indium for optoelectronic device applications and, in turn, alternative transparent conducting oxide (TCO) materials are required. In this report, we show that aluminum-doped zinc oxide (AZO) thin films grown by atomic layer deposition (ALD) are sufficiently conductive and transparent to outperform ITO as the cathode in inverted polymer solar cells. Reference polymer solar cells made with atomic-layer-deposited AZO cathodes, PCE10 as the polymer donor and PC71BM as the fullerene acceptor (model systems), reach power conversion efficiencies of ca. 10% (compared to ca. 9% with ITO-coated glass), without compromising other figures of merit. These ALD-grown AZO electrodes are promising for a wide range of optoelectronic device applications relying on TCOs.


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

Hybrid tandem quantum dot/organic photovoltaic cells with complementary near infrared absorption

Taesoo Kim; Elenita Palmiano; Ru-Ze Liang; Hanlin Hu; Banavoth Murali; Ahmad R. Kirmani; Yuliar Firdaus; Yangqin Gao; Arif D. Sheikh; Mingjian Yuan; Omar F. Mohammed; Sjoerd Hoogland; Pierre M. Beaujuge; Edward H. Sargent; Aram Amassian

Monolithically integrated hybrid tandem solar cells that effectively combine solution-processed colloidal quantum dot (CQD) and organic bulk heterojunction subcells to achieve tandem performance that surpasses the individual subcell efficiencies have not been demonstrated to date. In this work, we demonstrate hybrid tandem cells with a low bandgap PbS CQD subcell harvesting the visible and near-infrared photons and a polymer:fullerene-poly (diketopyrrolopyrrole-terthiophene) (PDPP3T):[6,6]-phenyl-C60-butyric acid methyl ester (PC61BM)-top cell absorbing effectively the red and near-infrared photons of the solar spectrum in a complementary fashion. The two subcells are connected in series via an interconnecting layer (ICL) composed of a metal oxide layer, a conjugated polyelectrolyte, and an ultrathin layer of Au. The ultrathin layer of Au forms nano-islands in the ICL, reducing the series resistance, increasing the shunt resistance, and enhancing the device fill-factor. The hybrid tandems reach a power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 7.9%, significantly higher than the PCE of the corresponding individual single cells, representing one of the highest efficiencies reported to date for hybrid tandem solar cells based on CQD and polymer subcells.


Chemistry of Materials | 2016

π-Bridge-Independent 2-(Benzo[c][1,2,5]thiadiazol-4-ylmethylene)malononitrile-Substituted Nonfullerene Acceptors for Efficient Bulk Heterojunction Solar Cells

Kai Wang; Yuliar Firdaus; Maxime Babics; Federico Cruciani; Qasim Saleem; Abdulrahman El Labban; Maha A. Alamoudi; Tomasz Marszalek; Wojciech Pisula; Frédéric Laquai; Pierre M. Beaujuge


Advanced Energy Materials | 2017

Polymer Main-Chain Substitution Effects on the Efficiency of Nonfullerene BHJ Solar Cells

Yuliar Firdaus; Luna Pratali Maffei; Federico Cruciani; Michael A. Müller; Shengjian Liu; Sergei Lopatin; Nimer Wehbe; Guy Olivier Ngongang Ndjawa; Aram Amassian; Frédéric Laquai; Pierre M. Beaujuge


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

Isoindigo‐3,4‐Difluorothiophene Polymer Acceptors Yield “All‐Polymer” Bulk‐Heterojunction Solar Cells with over 7 % Efficiency

Shengjian Liu; Yuliar Firdaus; Simil Thomas; Zhipeng Kan; Federico Cruciani; Sergei Lopatin; Jean-Luc M. Bredas; Pierre M. Beaujuge


Advanced Functional Materials | 2018

Additive‐Morphology Interplay and Loss Channels in “All‐Small‐Molecule” Bulk‐heterojunction (BHJ) Solar Cells with the Nonfullerene Acceptor IDTTBM

Ru-Ze Liang; Maxime Babics; Akmaral Seitkhan; Kai Wang; Paul B. Geraghty; Sergei Lopatin; Federico Cruciani; Yuliar Firdaus; Marco Caporuscio; David J. Jones; Pierre M. Beaujuge


Advanced Energy Materials | 2018

Carrier Transport and Recombination in Efficient “All-Small-Molecule” Solar Cells with the Nonfullerene Acceptor IDTBR

Ru-Ze Liang; Maxime Babics; Victoria Savikhin; Weimin Zhang; Vincent M. Le Corre; Sergei Lopatin; Zhipeng Kan; Yuliar Firdaus; Shengjian Liu; Iain McCulloch; Michael F. Toney; Pierre M. Beaujuge


ACS energy letters | 2018

Impact of Nonfullerene Acceptor Core Structure on the Photophysics and Efficiency of Polymer Solar Cells

Maha A. Alamoudi; Jafar I. Khan; Yuliar Firdaus; Kai Wang; Denis Andrienko; Pierre M. Beaujuge; Frédéric Laquai

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Pierre M. Beaujuge

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Federico Cruciani

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Frédéric Laquai

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Maxime Babics

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Ru-Ze Liang

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Sergei Lopatin

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Akmaral Seitkhan

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Shengjian Liu

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Zhipeng Kan

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Aram Amassian

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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