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1.
ACS Appl Energy Mater ; 5(1): 461-468, 2022 Jan 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35098042

ABSTRACT

Ag alloying and the introduction of alkali elements through a postdeposition treatment are two approaches to improve the performance of Cu(In,Ga)Se2 (CIGS) thin film solar cells. In particular, a postdeposition treatment of an alkali metal fluoride of the absorber has shown a beneficial effect on the solar cells performance due to an increase in the open circuit voltage (V OC) for both (Ag,Cu)(In,Ga)Se2 (ACIGS) and CIGS based solar cells. Several reasons have been suggested for the improved V OC in CIGS solar cells including absorber surface and interface effects. Less works investigated how the applied postdeposition treatment influences the ACIGS absorber surface and interface properties and the subsequent buffer layer growth. In this work we employed hard X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to study the chemical and electronic properties at the real functional interface between a CdS buffer and ACIGS absorbers that have been exposed to different alkali metal fluoride treatments during preparation. All samples show an enhanced Ag content at the CdS/ACIGS interface as compared to ACIGS bulk-like composition, and it is also shown that this enhanced Ag content anticorrelates with Ga content. The results indicate that the absorber composition at the near-surface region changes depending on the applied alkali postdeposition treatment. The Cu and Ga decrease and the Ag increase are stronger for the RbF treatment as compared to the CsF treatment, which correlates with the observed device characteristics. This suggests that a selective alkali postdeposition treatment could change the ACIGS absorber surface composition, which can influence the solar cell behavior.

2.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 125(15): 8360-8368, 2021 Apr 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34084262

ABSTRACT

The performance of hybrid perovskite materials in solar cells crucially depends on their electronic properties, and it is important to investigate contributions to the total electronic structure from specific components in the material. In a combined theoretical and experimental study of CH3NH3PbI3-methylammonium lead triiodide (MAPI)-and its bromide cousin CH3NH3PbBr3 (MAPB), we analyze nitrogen K-edge (N 1s-to-2p*) X-ray absorption (XA) spectra measured in MAPI and MAPB single crystals. This permits comparison of spectral features to the local character of unoccupied molecular orbitals on the CH3NH3 + (MA+) counterions and allows us to investigate how thermal fluctuations, hydrogen bonding, and halide-ion substitution influence the XA spectra as a measure of the local electronic structure. In agreement with the experiment, the simulated spectra for MAPI and MAPB show close similarity, except that the MAPB spectral features are blue-shifted by +0.31 eV. The shift is shown to arise from the intrinsic difference in the electronic structure of the two halide atoms rather than from structural differences between the materials. In addition, from the spectral sampling analysis of molecular dynamics simulations, clear correlations between geometric descriptors (N-C, N-H, and H···I/Br distances) and spectral features are identified and used to explain the spectral shapes.

3.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 123(14): 8892-8901, 2019 Apr 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31001369

ABSTRACT

On-surface synthesis has emerged in the last decade as a method to create graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) with atomic precision. The underlying premise of this bottom-up strategy is that precursor molecules undergo a well-defined sequence of inter- and intramolecular reactions, leading to the formation of a single product. As such, the structure of the GNR is encoded in the precursors. However, recent examples have shown that not only the molecule, but also the coinage metal surface on which the reaction takes place, plays a decisive role in dictating the nanoribbon structure. In this work, we use scanning probe microscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to investigate the behavior of 10,10'-dichloro-9,9'-bianthryl (DCBA) on Ag(111). Our study shows that Ag(111) can induce the formation of both seven-atom wide armchair GNRs (7-acGNRs) and 3,1-chiral GNRs (3,1-cGNRs), demonstrating that a single molecule on a single surface can react to different nanoribbon products. We additionally show that coadsorbed dibromoperylene can promote surface-assisted dehydrogenative coupling in DCBA, leading to the exclusive formation of 3,1-cGNRs.

4.
ACS Nano ; 9(9): 8997-9011, 2015 Sep 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26301684

ABSTRACT

Bottom-up strategies can be effectively implemented for the fabrication of atomically precise graphene nanoribbons. Recently, using 10,10'-dibromo-9,9'-bianthracene (DBBA) as a molecular precursor to grow armchair nanoribbons on Au(111) and Cu(111), we have shown that substrate activity considerably affects the dynamics of ribbon formation, nonetheless without significant modifications in the growth mechanism. In this paper we compare the on-surface reaction pathways for DBBA molecules on Cu(111) and Cu(110). Evolution of both systems has been studied via a combination of core-level X-ray spectroscopies, scanning tunneling microscopy, and theoretical calculations. Experimental and theoretical results reveal a significant increase in reactivity for the open and anisotropic Cu(110) surface in comparison with the close-packed Cu(111). This increased reactivity results in a predominance of the molecular-substrate interaction over the intermolecular one, which has a critical impact on the transformations of DBBA on Cu(110). Unlike DBBA on Cu(111), the Ullmann coupling cannot be realized for DBBA/Cu(110) and the growth of nanoribbons via this mechanism is blocked. Instead, annealing of DBBA on Cu(110) at 250 °C results in the formation of a new structure: quasi-zero-dimensional flat nanographenes. Each nanographene unit has dehydrogenated zigzag edges bonded to the underlying Cu rows and oriented with the hydrogen-terminated armchair edge parallel to the [1-10] direction. Strong bonding of nanographene to the substrate manifests itself in a high adsorption energy of -12.7 eV and significant charge transfer of 3.46e from the copper surface. Nanographene units coordinated with bromine adatoms are able to arrange in highly regular arrays potentially suitable for nanotemplating.

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