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Seminar on Green Solvent Processed Polymer Solar Cells

February 26, 2018 @ 11:00 am - 12:00 pm

Speaker:  Dr. Natalie Holmes

Abstract: Polymer solar cells offer a competitive alternative to existing conventional solar cells due to their light weight, semi-transparency, low cost, mechanical flexibility and ability to be printed with similar manufacturing techniques to newspapers and labels. While processing of polymer solar cell interfacial layers is from eco-friendly printing inks, the photoactive layer is still deposited from toxic chlorinated solvents. Three key avenues are being pursued by the polymer solar cell research community to move away from chlorinated solvent processing, (1) aqueous colloidal nanoparticle inks, (2) synthetic modification of the semiconducting polymers and fullerenes with polar functional groups, and (3) utilising available modelling packages to determine material Hansen solubility parameters (HSP) and trialling unconventional solvent systems. This talk will give an overview of the three strategies, followed by a detailed account of the researcher’s work in the space of aqueous colloidal nanoparticle ink technology. Nanoparticle photoactive layers have a dual advantage, the second advantage being they offer control of the semiconducting polymer and fullerene film morphology on the nanoscale, a factor critical to the optimisation of exciton dissociation efficiency and charge transport in these devices. The use of advanced synchrotron X-ray characterisation techniques have enabled the material-morphology-performance relationships to be unravelled in these devices, and thereby accelerated the development of nanoparticle polymer solar cells.

Details

Date:
February 26, 2018
Time:
11:00 am - 12:00 pm

Venue

Research School of Physics and Engineering (RSPE), Australian National University
Canberra, ACT 2600 Australia + Google Map