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Schemme, Thomas: Light control and solar power conversion by organic optoelectronic assemblies. 2019
Inhalt
Contents
1 Introduction – What it's all about and why
I Light-sensitive functional organic materials
2 Organic molecules
2.1 Formation of organic molecules and bonding
2.2 Optical excitation and relaxation of organic molecules
3 Energy and charge transport
3.1 Energy levels, ionization potential and electron affinity
3.2 Energy transfer
3.2.1 Förster resonant energy transfer
3.2.2 Dexter transfer
3.3 Charge separation
3.4 Charge transport processes
4 Common representative molecules
4.1 Donors
4.2 Acceptors
II Photorefractive polymer composites
5 Fundamentals of photorefractive properties in organic media
5.1 Photoconductivity
5.2 Electro-optic effect
5.2.1 Short introduction into nonlinear optics
5.2.2 Field-dependent refractive index change
5.2.3 Pockels effect
5.2.4 Kerr effect
5.2.5 Electro-optics in organic photorefractive materials
5.3 Photorefractive effect
5.4 Composition and sample layout
5.4.1 5CB
5.4.2 Fabrication of photorefractive samples
5.4.2.1 Electrode patterning and sample layout
5.4.2.2 Synthesis of photorefractive compositions
5.4.2.3 Assembly of the samples and melt-pressing
6 Photophysical characterization
6.1 UV/Vis spectroscopy
6.2 Photocurrent spectroscopy
6.2.1 Spectroscopy technique
6.2.2 Influence of different components on photocurrent
6.2.3 Transient development of dark conductivity and internal photocurrent efficiency
6.3 Two-beam coupling
6.3.1 Setup and fundamentals
6.3.2 Two-beam coupling performance of the realized compositions
6.3.3 History dependence
7 Resume and outlook on the realized organic PR media
III Bulk-heterojunction solar cells
8 Concepts of organic solar cell design and fabrication
8.1 Bilayer heterojunction
8.2 Bulk heterojunction
8.3 Fabrication of bulk heterojunction solar cells
8.3.1 Spin coating
Static dispense
Dynamic dispense
8.3.2 UV/ozone cleaning
8.3.3 Thermal metal evaporation
8.3.4 ITO electrode preparation
8.3.5 PEDOT:PSS layer deposition
8.3.6 Active layer deposition
8.3.7 Application of the aluminium back electrode
9 Characterization of organic solar cells
9.1 Structure analysis of polymer chains of P3HT
9.1.1 Preparation of thin films and solution containing good and bad solvent
9.1.2 Interpretation of the absorption spectra
9.2 Absorption spectroscopy and numerical modeling of P3HT:diPBI solar cells
10 Perylene derivative acceptors and applied donors
10.1 Material properties
10.1.1 PBI
10.1.2 Triply-linked diPBI
10.1.3 Singly-linked diPBI
10.1.4 PPDI
10.1.5 PBDTTT-C-T
10.1.6 PEDOT:PSS
10.1.7 Energy levels and absorption spectra
10.2 Solar cell prototypes and and their performance
10.2.1 Reference compostion: P3HT:PCBM
10.2.2 Stability considerations: Degradation of P3HT:PCBM cells
10.2.3 Monomeric perylene bisimide as acceptor
10.2.4 Triply-linked diPBI as acceptor
10.2.5 Imide-linked PPDI and PBDTTT-C-T
10.2.6 Singly-linked diPBI as acceptor and PBDTTT-C-T as donor materials
10.3 Differences between theoretical open-circuit voltage and obtained data
11 Resume on organic solar cell processing under ambient conditions
IV Photopatterning of azopolymers and light-propagation simulations
12 Azo compounds and cis-trans isomerization
13 Photomigration and surface relief gratings
13.1 Proposed mechanisms of light-induced mass transfer
13.1.1 Model 1: Optical-field gradient force model
13.1.2 Model 2: Mean-field model
13.1.3 Model 3: Pressure gradient force model
13.1.4 Model 4: Asymmetric diffusion model
13.1.5 Model 5: Photoinduced molecular diffusion model
13.1.6 Model 6: Thermal models
13.2 Conclusion of the proposed models
14 Fabrication of surface relief gratings
14.1 Two-beam interference setup
14.2 Phase-only spatial light modulator-based setup
14.2.1 Light patterning via phase-only spatial light modulation
14.3 Azopolymer film preparation
15 Realized patterns via two-beam interference
15.1 Maximization of height modulation
16 Realization of complex 2D patterns – between disorder and order
16.1 Nondiffracting beams: a short introduction
16.2 Bessel patterns – circular symmetry
16.3 Penrose patterns – quasiperiodic and nondiffracting
16.4 Cobblestone pattern – continuous frequency spectrum
16.5 Vogel spiral patterns – mimicking nature
17 Molding of SRGs into PDMS
18 Modeling of light propagation through patterned surfaces
18.1 FDTD technique
18.2 Simulation parameters and the PDMS-glass model
18.3 Visualization of redistributed light
19 Resume on SRG generation and light propagation
20 Outcome and outlook
Bibliography
Acronyms
List of Symbols
Glossary
Appendix
A Additional information and parameters
A.1 Conversion factors of the polarizability
A.2 Molecular weights of employed compounds
A.3 Solvent data
A.4 Good and bad solvent data
A.5 Maximum amplitudes obtained from simulated cross sections
Publications
Deutschsprachige Zusammenfassung
Lebenslauf (Curriculum Vitae)