Thursday, April 3, 2014, 16:00
WHGA/Auditorium
V. Wood, ETH Zurich
Abstract:
Materials with nanoscale dimensions often exhibit novel optical and electronic properties that could improve the performance of optoelectronic and electrochemical systems; however, transport in solids made of these materials remains poorly understood, leaving significant room for improvement in the way these materials are integrated into devices.
This talk will introduce our research activities at the Laboratory for Nanoelectronics (lne.ee.ethz.ch), which focus on the development of analytical techniques to study the electronic and ionic transport in solution-processed structures composed of materials with nanoscale dimensions. The understanding gained from these studies is then applied to developing new materials and device architectures for optoelectronic and electrochemical energy storage applications.
The talk will present three examples of our work pertaining to colloidal nanocrystal (NC) LEDs and solar cells. First, I will introduce the concept of capacitive-based structures to experimentally investigate the origins of luminescence quenching in NCs and explain how we used them to demonstrate a fundamental tradeoff facing bandstructure engineering of NCs for LED applications [1]. Second, I will explain how we perform the first quantitative measurements on electronic trap states in NC solids and explore their impact on solar cell performance [2].
[1] D. Bozyigit, O. Yarema, and V. Wood. Advanced Functional Materials 23 (2013).
[2] D. Bozyigit, S. Volk, O. Yarema, and V. Wood. Nano Letters 13 (2013).