This week’s HOT articles

These articles are HOT as recommended by the referees.

Take a look at this week’s selection…

Energy applications of ionic liquids
Douglas R. MacFarlane, Naoki Tachikawa, Maria Forsyth, Jennifer M. Pringle, Patrick C. Howlett, Gloria D. Elliott, James H. Davis, Masayoshi Watanabe, Patrice Simon and C. Austen Angell
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42099J, Perspective

Diffusion and adsorption of dye molecules in mesoporous TiO2 photoelectrodes studied by indirect nanoplasmonic sensing
Viktoria Gusak, Leo-Philipp Heiniger, Vladimir P. Zhdanov, Michael Grätzel, Bengt Kasemo and Christoph Langhammer
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42352B, Paper

Diffusion and adsorption of dye molecules in mesoporous TiO2 photoelectrodes studied by indirect nanoplasmonic sensing

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Conductive polymer hydrogels for the next generation of high-performance electrochemical devices

Heather is a PhD candidate working on solar energy with Nate Lewis at Caltech.  When she isn’t growing microstructured silicon photocathodes, she can be found horseback riding, singing and hiking.

Conductive polymer hydrogels (CPHs) are of significant interest for a broad range of applications, including biosensors, lithium batteries, supercapacitors and biofuel cells.

The cutting edge of the field is in creating 3D nanostructured CPHs for electrochemical devices, and a recent review by Lijia PanGuihua Yu et al. focuses on new synthetic techniques to make these nanostructured materials, along with a discussion of their potential applications.

One of the greatest strengths of the CPHs is their versatility.  Many different conductive polymers, such as PEDOT, PAni, PPy and PTH can be used as the electrical backbone of the material, and there are many templating techniques (such as inkjet printing, copolymerization and template-directed growth) that can be used to achieve the desired morphology and electrical properties.

An exciting new synthetic route to nanostructured CPHs is gelation of a PAni network using phytic acid as the gelator and dopant.  The interactions between the phytic acid molecules and the PAni chains allows for the formation of “foam-like nanostructures which are constructed with coral-like dendritic nanofibers with uniform diameters of 60–100 nm).”  The PAni chains allow for excellent electrical conductivity and the as-prepared hydrogel is suitable for spray coating and inkjet printing.  PAni hydrogels as high-performance electrodes for glucose sensors and supercapacitors have been demonstrated, and other CPHs show great promise for battery electrodes, in drug delivery devices, and in the removal of free radicals from the environment.

Want to know more?  Read the full article in EES today!

3D nanostructured conductive polymer hydrogels for high-performance electrochemical devices
Yu Zhao, Borui Liu, Lijia Pan and Guihua Yu
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE40997J

By Heather Audesirk

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This week’s HOT articles

These articles are HOT as recommended by the referees.

Take a look at this week’s selection…

Fabrication and assembly of ultrathin high-efficiency silicon solar microcells integrating electrical passivation and anti-reflection coatings
Yuan Yao, Eric Brueckner, Lanfang Li and Ralph Nuzzo  
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42230E, Paper

Implanted biofuel cells operating in vivo – methods, applications and perspectives – feature article
Evgeny Katz and Kevin MacVittie  
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42126K, Opinion


Assessing the drivers of regional trends in solar photovoltaic manufacturing
Alan C. Goodrich, Douglas M. Powell, Ted L. James, Michael Woodhouse and Tonio Buonassisi  
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE40701B, Analysis

Visualizing physical, electronic, and optical properties of organic photovoltaic cells
Martin Pfannmöller, Wolfgang Kowalsky and Rasmus R. Schröder  
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE41773E, Perspective

  

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Poster Prizes at ISACS 12

EES and Chemical Science were proud to sponsor poster prizes at ISACS 12 last week.

Congratulations to the winners!

The 1st price went to Jesper Jacobsson (Uppsala)

The runner up awards to Ahu Dumanli (Cambridge) and Sven Neudeck (Goettingen)

From left to right: Erwin Reisner, Jesper Jacobsson, Sven Neudeck, Ahu Dumanli, James Durrant

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Triple Junction Polymer Solar Cells

Sebastian Axmann is a guest web-writer for Energy and Environmental Science. He works currently as a PhD student at Aachen University in the group of Professor Vescan and Professor Heuken. His research comprises organic photovoltaics based on small molecules. Being fascinated by current nanotechnology, his interest has also broadened over time to neighboring fields like manufacturing and metrology of recent nanostructures.

Current solar cell research focuses on increasing the power conversion efficiency (PCE) by employing multiple junctions. A new review by Adebanjo et al. provides an overview of the recent results.

The usage of multiple junctions to cover a broader range of the solar spectrum is used widely in III-V semiconductor solar cells. This approach has been transferred to organic polymer solar cells. By stacking several cells on top of each other, thermalisation losses are reduced and the open circuit voltage is improved. Achievable PCE values are calculated by the authors of the paper “Triple Junction Polymer Solar Cells”. Depending on the band gap of the materials used, maximum values are predicted to be 15% to 23%.

The article also reviews current materials used as active and interconnecting layers. Fullerenes are commonly employed as acceptor materials. Donor materials are most often polymers like P3HT. These can be tuned by structural modification for better absorption of different light spectra. Metal-oxides or transition-oxides are finally used for recombination and injection layers.

Current PCE’s do not reach the maximum value, e.g. 9.64% for a triple junction instead of 22.3%. Adebanjo et al. point out that the design of absorbing polymers, the selection of interconnecting layers and overall stack design are closely interconnected. In consequence, optimisation of the devices is achieved by tuning several parameters.

By Sebastian Axmann

Take a look at the review in EES:

Triple Junction Polymer Solar Cells
Olusegun Adebanjo, Purna Maharjan, Prajwal Adhikary, Mingtai Wang, Shangfeng Yang and Qiquan Qiao
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42257G, Review Article

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Predicting performance of porous carbon-based electrodes for capacitive deionization towards directed design strategies

Prineha Narang is a guest web-writer for EES. Pri is a Ph.D. student in Applied Physics with Profs. Harry A. Atwater and Nathan S. Lewis at Caltech. Outside the lab, she spends her time climbing mountains and running.

Researchers, led by Dr. Volker Presser in Germany, present a methodology to directly predict the desalination performance of carbon-based electrodes for capacitive deionization (CDI), an important first step towards directed CDI design.

Carbon-based electrodes offer an energy-efficient water desalination technology that involves removal of ions from water by electrosorption in charged porous carbon electrodes. The family of carbon materials ranging from activated carbons, carbon nanotubes, exfoliated grapheme electrodes to templated carbons and carbide-derived carbons have been extensively studied for desalination by CDI. To achieve optimal performance, components of the CDI system need to be tuned to achieve both high salt electrosorption capacity and fast kinetics, simultaneously. Therefore, tools to predict the performance of a certain carbon material and CDI design are essential for device design.

Given the inherent non-linearity of desalination by porous carbons, Porada et al. in their paper, Direct Prediction of the Desalination Performance
of Porous Carbon Electrodes for Capacitive Deionization, follow a two-prong approach: i) predict the desalination performance of a carbon material based on its pore size distribution and ii) use a two-dimensional porous electrode CDI transport model to predict the actual salt electrosorption kinetics. The authors have convincingly demonstrated that there is no direct relationship between salt electrosorption capacity and typically cited pore metrics and that the salt electrosorption capacity can be predicted by analysis of the pore size distribution and the pore volume correlated with incremental pore size ranges.

Despite the complexity of CDI, their work has shown the feasibility of predicting performance of different carbon-based materials in a passionately debated field. Looking ahead, the rational device design of carbon electrodes is certainly on the cards.  This paper is a must-read for anyone working in the field of carbon materials!

Read the paper here:

Direct Prediction of the Desalination Performance of Porous Carbon Electrodes for Capacitive Deionization
Slawomir Porada, Lars Borchardt, Martin Oschatz, Marek Bryjak, Jennifer Atchison, Karel J. Keesman, Stefan Kaskel, Maarten Biesheuvel and Volker Presser
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42209G

By Prineha Narang

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This week’s HOT articles

These articles are HOT as recommended by the referees.

Take a look at this week’s selection…

Doping carbons beyond nitrogen: an overview of advanced heteroatom doped carbons with boron, sulphur and phosphorus for energy applications
Jens Peter Paraknowitsch and Arne Thomas  
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE41444B, Review Article

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The energetic implications of curtailing versus storing solar- and wind-generated electricity
Charles J. Barnhart, Michael Dale, Adam R. Brandt and Sally M. Benson  
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE41973H, Analysis

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Revealing the influence of P3HT:PCBM phase separation in organic photovoltaics

Sebastian Axmann is a guest web-writer for Energy and Environmental Science. He works currently as a PhD student at Aachen University in the group of Professor Vescan and Professor Heuken. His research comprises organic photovoltaics based on small molecules. Being fascinated by current nanotechnology, his interest has also broadened over time to neighboring fields like manufacturing and metrology of recent nanostructures.

The “working horse” of current organic photovoltaics research are the polymers P3HT and PC(61)BM. Both materials have been characterized extensively in single layers as well as in devices. To date, a wide range of power conversion efficiency values have been reported and linked to various factors including material sources and processing conditions.

A new article in the RSC Journal Energy & Environmental Science by Westacott et al. examines P3HT and PCBM with respect to photon absorption. They compare the influence of a high and low average molecular weight P3HT (H-P3HT/L-P3HT type) and temperature treatments upon exciton dissociation yield. This comparison reveals that a highly intermixed phase of both materials improves charge generation which is promoted by a high average weight of P3HT. The underlying mechanism is found to be the formation of a finely intermixed phase between both materials.

A distinct increase in dissociated excitons was found for the high weight P3HT even under different concentration levels for both devices.

To distinguish between different mechanisms of phase formation in both types, pristine layers of each molecule type were deposited and laminated. Upon short heating (30s, 150°C), similar phase intermixing and subsequent reduction of crystallinity was observed for both types.

The L-P3HT is assumed to aggregate easier as the average chain length is smaller. Upon heating, separation of both materials is induced which in turn leads to a loss of the finely intermixed phase. The H-P3HT is assumed to incorporate less mobile amounts of PCBM due to the macromolecular structure of the folded molecules. Thus the H-P3HT type yields higher exciton dissociation rates and thus possibly larger efficiencies.

By Sebastian Axmann

Read the article in EES:

On the role of intermixed phases in organic photovoltaic blends
Paul Westacott, John R. Tumbleston, Safa Shoaee, Sarah Fearn, James H. Bannock, James B. Gilchrist, Sandrine Heutz, John deMello, Martin Heeney, Harald Ade, James Durrant, David S. McPhail and Natalie Stingelin
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE41821A

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Pinhole defect filler enhances performance of organic dye-sensitized solar cells

Benjamin is a guest web-writer for Energy and Environmental Science. He is a graduate student in Steven Holdcroft’s group at Simon Fraser University and lives in Vancouver. In addition to chemistry, he enjoys fencing épée, tennis, hiking, kayaking, reading, and gardening.

Researchers from China have found an effective strategy for filling the pinhole defects of organic dye-grafted titania films, enhancing the performance of organic dye-sensitized solar cells employing non-corrosive cobalt redox electrolytes.

Dye-sensitized solar cells (DSCs) use organic dyes to enhance the light-harvesting of inorganic solar cells, altering the wavelengths of incoming light to those better absorbed by the cell in a process known as up- or down-conversion. When dyeing a cell, a good solvent must be used to prevent the dye aggregating, the aim being to create only a monolayer of dye on the surface. However, this creates an incomplete coating of the inorganic surface with the dye, the gaps called ‘pinhole defects,’ which act as sites where the charge-hole pairs created by the absorption of photons recombine easily, significantly reducing current generation and thereby the effectiveness of the cell.

Zhang et al. in the paper Judicious selection of a pinhole defect filler to generally enhance the performance of organic dye-sensitized solar cells detail their quest to solve this problem, creating two bulky model dyes for coating a titania support and three very similar but less bulky ‘fillers.’ The dyes were coated onto the titanium with good solvents and the fillers with poor solvents to maintain the integrity of the dye coating. In every case, the filler reduced open-current voltage, a fundamental measure of efficiency. The net result was an impressive solar-to-electricity energy efficiency of 10.5% under non-concentrated light for their best cell.

The exciting results of this study make it a must-read for those involved with organic solar cells. Additionally, though this is a technical paper specific to dye-sensitized organic solar cells, anyone with interest in solar cells would find interest in this article because the general strategy of defect-filling could be used to reduce interfacial charge recombination in other types of solar cells.

Read the article in EES:

Judicious selection of a pinhole defect filler to generally enhance the performance of organic dye-sensitized solar cells
Min Zhang, Jing Zhang, Ye Fan, Lin Yang, Yinglin Wang, Renzhi Li and Peng Wang
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42431F, Communication

By Benjamin Britton

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A focus on solar photovoltaics

The RSC would like to share with you a collection of recent  journal articles and books in the area of solar photovoltaics.

You can read selected articles for free until the 31st October 2013 by clicking on the links below.

We hope that you enjoy the collection!

Did you know that the RSC has put together a webpage on solar photovoltaics, which brings together information on activities for scientists, policymakers, educators and young people? Take a look today…

We have also put together a collection of articles on solar fuels and artificial photosynthesis, which are also free until the end of October. You can view this collection here…

Reviews and Perspectives

FREE: Photosensitized electron transfer processes of nanocarbons applicable to solar cells
Francis D’Souza and Osamu Ito
Chem. Soc. Rev., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C1CS15201G, Tutorial Review

FREE: Novel nanostructures for next generation dye-sensitized solar cells
Nicolas Tétreault and Michael Grätzel
Energy Environ. Sci., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2EE03242B, Perspective

FREE: Porphyrin-sensitized solar cells
Lu-Lin Li and Eric Wei-Guang Diau
Chem. Soc. Rev, 2013, DOI: 10.1039/C2CS35257E, Review Article

FREE: Carbon nanotube-based heterostructures for solar energy applications
Lei Wang, Haiqing Liu, Robert M. Konik, James A. Misewich and Stanislaus S. Wong
Chem. Soc. Rev., 2013, DOI: 10.1039/C3CS60088B, Review Article

FREE: Semiconductor nanowires: a platform for exploring limits and concepts for nano-enabled solar cells
Thomas J. Kempa, Robert W. Day, Sun-Kyung Kim, Hong-Gyu Park and Charles M. Lieber
Energy Environ. Sci., 2013, DOI: 10.1039/C3EE24182C, Review Article

FREE: Efficient photon management with nanostructures for photovoltaics
Bo Hua, Qingfeng Lin, Qianpeng Zhang and Zhiyong Fan
Nanoscale, 2013, DOI: 10.1039/C3NR01152F, Review Article

FREE: Plasmonic photocatalysts: harvesting visible light with noble metal nanoparticles
Peng Wang, Baibiao Huang, Ying Dai and Myung-Hwan Whangbo
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2CP40823F, Perspective

FREE: Improvement of dye-sensitized solar cells toward the broader light harvesting of the solar spectrum
Suresh Kannan Balasingam, Minoh Lee, Man Gu Kang and Yongseok Jun
Chem. Commun., 2013, DOI: 10.1039/C2CC37616D, Feature Article

FREE: Nanostructured Titania: the current and future promise of Titania nanotubes
Kevin C. Schwartzenberg and Kimberly A. Gray
Catal. Sci. Technol., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2CY00538G, Perspective

That’s not all! Go to the bottom of this post to view more Reviews and Perspectives in this collection…

Original Research Articles

FREE: Low-temperature processed meso-superstructured to thin-film perovskite solar cells
James M. Ball, Michael M. Lee, Andrew Hey and Henry J. Snaith
Energy Environ. Sci., 2013, DOI: 10.1039/C3EE40810H, Communication

FREE: Tridentate cobalt complexes as alternative redox couples for high-efficiency dye-sensitized solar cells
Kais Ben Aribia, Thomas Moehl, Shaik M. Zakeeruddin and Michael Grätzel
Chem. Sci., 2013, DOI: 10.1039/C2SC21401F, Edge Article

FREE: Spirally configured cis-stilbene/fluorene hybrids as bipolar, organic sensitizers for solar cell applications
Wei-Shan Chao, Ken-Hsien Liao, Chien-Tien Chen, Wei-Kai Huang, Chi-Ming Lan and Eric Wei-Guang Diau
Chem. Commun., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2CC17079E, Communication

FREE: An ester-functionalized diketopyrrolopyrrole molecule with appropriate energy levels for application in solution-processed organic solar cells
Meirong Chen, Weifei Fu, Minmin Shi, Xiaolian Hu, Junying Pan, Jun Ling, Hangying Li and Hongzheng Chen
J. Mater. Chem. A, 2013, DOI: 10.1039/C2TA00148A, Paper

FREE: An isoindigo and dithieno[3,2-b:2′,3′-d]silole copolymer for polymer solar cells
Romain Stalder, Caroline Grand, Jegadesan Subbiah, Franky So and John R. ReynoldsPolym. Chem., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C1PY00402F, Communication

FREE: Photoelectrical properties of Ag2S quantum dot-modified TiO2 nanorod arrays and their application for photovoltaic devices
Bingkun Liu, Dejun Wang, Yu Zhang, Haimei Fan, Yanhong Lin, Tengfei Jiang and Tengfeng XieDalton Trans., 2013, DOI: 10.1039/C2DT32031B, Paper

Again, you can see more original research articles in this collection at the bottom of this page.


You might be interested in these e-books from RSC Publishing…
(PDFs of the front matter, table of contents and first chapter are free to view.)

Building Integrated Photovoltaic Thermal Systems
Authors: Basant Agrawal, Gopal Nath Tiwari

Fundamentals of Photovoltaic Modules and Their Applications
Authors: Gopal Nath Tiwari, Swapnil Dubey


Also take a look at these exciting related themed issues, themed collections and Editor’s Choice selections…

Photocatalysis
Themed issue in Catalysis Science & Technology
Guest Editors: Kazunari Domen and Licheng Sun

Inorganic photophysics and photochemistry –Fundamentals and applications
Themed issue in Dalton Transactions
Guest Editors: Michael D. Ward and Julia Weinstein

Nanomaterials for energy conversion and storage
Themed issue in Journal of Materials Chemistry
Guest Editors: K. Kalyanasundaram and Michael Grätzel

Editor’s Choice: Photovoltaic devices by Henry Snaith

Editor’s choice: Nanostructured polymer and dye-sensitized solar cells by Zhiqun Lin

Editor’s Choice: All-organic and hybrid photovoltaics by Chris McNeill


Click here to view more articles in this collection…

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