nathan duderstadt , chemical engineering, university of cincinnati

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Nathan Duderstadt, Chemical Engineering, University of Cincinnati Stoney Sutton, Electrical Engineering, University of Cincinnati Kate Yoshino, Engineering Physics, Taylor University Advisors: Ms. Yan Jin and Dr. Vikram Kuppa 1 CEAS REU Project 4 Synthesis of Solar Cell Materials, and Fabrication of Novel Polymer-Based Solar Cells Grant ID No.: DUE-0756921

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CEAS REU Project 4 Synthesis of Solar Cell Materials, and Fabrication of Novel Polymer-Based Solar Cells. Nathan Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of Cincinnati Stoney Sutton, Electrical Engineering, University of Cincinnati Kate Yoshino, Engineering Physics, Taylor University - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

Nathan Duderstadt, Chemical Engineering, University of CincinnatiStoney Sutton, Electrical Engineering, University of CincinnatiKate Yoshino, Engineering Physics, Taylor University

Advisors: Ms. Yan Jin and Dr. Vikram Kuppa1

CEAS REU Project 4Synthesis of Solar Cell Materials, and Fabrication of Novel Polymer-Based Solar Cells

Grant ID No.: DUE-0756921

Page 2: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Introduction

Why solar cells?

Why ORGANIC solar cells?

What is graphene and what role does it play?

Page 3: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

3

In a semiconductor, the energy from the sun both moves the electron to an excited state, but also creates a hole (positive charge) in its place.

Lowest UnoccupiedMolecular Orbital

Solar Radiatio

n

Charge Generation

Electric Current

Charge Transport

to Electrodes

ehHighest OccupiedMolecular Orbital

Animation and concepts adapted from Dr. Vikram Kuppa’s presentation on organic photovoltaics

Background Literature Review

Page 4: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Picture from: Deibel, Carsten, and Vladimir Dyakonov. (2010). " Polymer–fullerene Bulk Heterojunction Solar Cells.." Vol. 73.9, pp. 1-39.

Problems with Organic Semiconductors: Charge Separation Charge Transfer

Solutions: Bulk-

heterojunction structured active layer

Graphene

Organic Photovoltaic Devices

Page 5: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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So, Why Graphene?

High aspect ratio Conductivity Enables lower concentration

of graphene

Charge transport Hole AND Electron

Drawbacks Increase recombination Difficult to control morphology

Atomic Force Microscopy Image of 0.045 mg/ml 300 mesh graphene solution

Page 6: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Cell Structure

Aluminum (Cathode)

Lithium Fluoride

Active Layer (P3HT:F8BT:Graphene)

PEDOT:PSS

Indium Tin Oxide (Anode)

Glass Slide

The thickness of the cell is approximately without the glass slide is approximately 500 nm in thickness.

Page 7: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Aluminum (Cathode)

Indium Tin Oxide (Anode)

Active layer

Glass Slide

Solar Cell

Cell Structure

Page 8: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Goals and Objectives

We aim to determine how graphene makes solar cells more efficient.

Learn the basics of Organic Photovoltaic (OPV) research

Gain expertise in making and characterizing OPV cells

Differentiate between processing techniques and their influence on the solar cell

Evaluate graphene content on cell performance

Page 9: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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1. Learn methods for making graphene solutions and fabricating solar cell devices

2. Prepare and analyze graphene solutions for use in solar cell polymers

3. Fabricate solar cell devices and perform thermal treatment

4. Characterize the cell through various testing

5. Conduct morphology and conductivity studies on the polymer films with different graphene concentrations

6. Report writing and presentations

Tasks

Page 10: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Task1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Training: Make Graphene Solution, Fabricate Solar

Cell              

Conductivity Studies for Graphene

Variations                

Solar Cell Fabrication and Testing

               

Data Analysis               

Work on Deliverables: Paper, Presentation,

Poster                

Week

Timeline and Schedule

✓ ✓

✓ ✓

✓ ✓

Page 11: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Progress Report

Report and Presentation

Data Analysis

Conductivity Studies

Solar Cell Fabrication

Training

Literature Review

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

Percentage Complete[%]

Page 12: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Conductivity Testing

Parameters:

Graphene concentration

Application method

Electrode configuration

Graphite type

Sonication amount

Page 13: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Conductivity

-3.00E+00 -2.00E+00 -1.00E+00 0.00E+00 1.00E+00 2.00E+00 3.00E+00

-1.50E+00

-1.00E+00

-5.00E-01

0.00E+00

5.00E-01

1.00E+00

1.50E+00

Shorted Sample- Voltage vs. Current

Voltage (V)

Cu

rre

nt

(A)

Vertical Spin Example

Vertical Drop Example

Page 14: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Conductivity: Semiconductor Curve

-1.50E+00 -1.00E+00 -5.00E-01 0.00E+00 5.00E-01 1.00E+00 1.50E+00

-2.00E-06

0.00E+00

2.00E-06

4.00E-06

6.00E-06

8.00E-06

1.00E-05

Conductivity testing for Zero Graphene Content- Voltage vs. Current

BCD

Voltage (V)

Curr

ent (

A)

Polymer blends applied by drop casting, then spinning at very low rates

Page 15: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Varying Graphene

-2.00E+00 -1.00E+00 0.00E+00 1.00E+00 2.00E+00

-1.50E-01

-1.00E-01

-5.00E-02

-2.78E-17

5.00E-02

1.00E-01

1.50E-01

Varying Graphene Short Circuited- Voltage vs. Current

0 mg/ml Graphene0.1 mg/ml Graphene0.2 mg/ml Graphene 0.3 mg/ml Graphene

Voltage (V)

Cu

rre

nt

(A)

Polymer blends applied by spinning coating at very low rates

Page 16: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Varying Graphene

-3.00E+00 -2.00E+00 -1.00E+00 0.00E+00 1.00E+00 2.00E+00 3.00E+00

-3.00E-05

-2.00E-05

-1.00E-05

0.00E+00

1.00E-05

2.00E-05

3.00E-05

Best Sample of Varying Graphene

0.025 Graphene

0.05 Graphene

Voltage (V)

Cu

rren

t (A

)

Page 17: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Conductivity Summary

Just vertical, no lateral Spin coating, not drop casting Spin coat at low rates for longer periods of

time for thicker cells

Page 18: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Future Steps

Find appropriate graphene concentration Verify tentative results Apply to solar cell studies

Page 19: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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References

Chen,Y., Liu,Q., Liu, Z., et al., (2009). "Polymer Photovoltaic Cells Based on Solution-Processable Graphene and P3HT." Advanced Functional Materials Journal, Vol. 19,No.6, pp. 894-904.

Deibel, C, and V. Dyakonov. (2010). "Polymer–fullerene Bulk Heterojunction Solar Cells," Reports on Progress in Physics, IOP, Vol. 73, No. 9, pp. 1-39.

Li,G., Yang,Y., and R. Zhu.(2012). "Polymer Solar Cells." NATURE PHOTONICS No.6, pp.153-161.

McNeill, C.R., et al. (2007). , “Influence of Nanoscale Phase Separation on the Charge Generation Dynamics and Photovoltaic Performance of Conjugated Polymer Blends: Balancing Charge Generation and Separation.” Journal of Physical Chemistry C, Vol. 111, No. 51, pp. 19153-19160.

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References

Saricifti, N.S. (2001). “Plastic Solar Cells.” Abstracts of Papers of the American Chemical Society, Vol. 222, pp. U281-U281.

Shin, M., H. Kim, and Y. Kim. (2011). “Effect of film and device annealing in polymer:polymer solar cells with a LiF nanolayer.” Materials Science and Engineering B- Advanced Functional Solid-state Materials, Vol. 176, No. 5, pp. 382-386.

Wan, X., Guiankui L., Lu H., and Y.Chen. (2011), “Graphene- A Promising Material for Organic Photovoltaic Cells.” Advanced Materials, Vol. 23, pp. 5342-5358.

Yu, D., et al. (2010), “Soluble P3HT-Grafted Graphene for Efficient Bilayer- Heterojunction Photovoltaic Devices.” ACS Nano, Vol. 4, No. 10, pp. 5633-5640.

Page 21: Nathan  Duderstadt , Chemical Engineering, University of  Cincinnati

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Questions?Thank you!