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Tuesday, 11:00 am Room 1315 October 25, 2016 Chemistry Building Professor Libai Huang Department of Chemistry Purdue University Host: Professor Martin Zanni Refreshments will be available prior to the seminar at 10:45 a.m. outside room 1315 Graduate Students can meet with the speaker in Room 8305F at 1:00 pm Ultrafast Nanoscopy of Energy and Charge Transport The frontier in solar energy research now lies in learning how to integrate functional entities across multiple length scales to create optimal devices. Advancing the field requires transformative experimental tools that probe energy transfer processes from the nano to the meso lengthscales. To address this challenge, we aim to understand multi-scale energy transport across both multiple length and time scales, coupling simultaneous high spatial, structural, and temporal resolution. In my talk, I will focus on our recent progress on visualization of exciton and charge transport in solar energy harvesting materials from the nano to mesoscale employing ultrafast optical nanoscopy. With approaches that combine spatial and temporal resolutions, we have recently revealed a new singlet-mediated triplet transport mechanism in certain singlet fission materials. This work demonstrates a new triplet exciton transport mechanism leading to favorable long-range triplet exciton diffusion on the picosecond and nanosecond timescales for solar cell applications. We have also performed a direct measurement of carrier transport in space and in time by mapping carrier density with simultaneous ultrafast time resolution and 50 nm spatial precision in perovskite thin films using transient absorption microscopy. These results directly visualize long-range carrier transport of 220nm in 2 ns for solution-processed polycrystalline CH3NH3PbI3 thin films. The spatially and temporally resolved measurements reported here underscore the importance of the local morphology and establish an important first step towards discerning the underlying transport properties of perovskite materials.
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Ultrafast Nanoscopy of Energy and Charge Transport Libai seminar... · 2016. 8. 10. · Professor Libai Huang Department of Chemistry Purdue University Host: Professor Martin Zanni

Feb 26, 2021

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Page 1: Ultrafast Nanoscopy of Energy and Charge Transport Libai seminar... · 2016. 8. 10. · Professor Libai Huang Department of Chemistry Purdue University Host: Professor Martin Zanni

Tuesday, 11:00 am Room 1315 October 25, 2016 Chemistry Building

Professor Libai Huang Department of Chemistry

Purdue University Host: Professor Martin Zanni

Refreshments will be available prior to the seminar at 10:45 a.m. outside room 1315

Graduate Students can meet with the speaker in Room 8305F at 1:00 pm

Ultrafast Nanoscopy of Energy and Charge Transport

The frontier in solar energy research now lies in learning how to integrate functional entities across multiple length scales to create optimal devices. Advancing the field requires transformative experimental tools that probe energy transfer processes from the nano to the meso lengthscales. To address this challenge, we aim to understand multi-scale energy transport across both multiple length and time scales, coupling simultaneous high spatial, structural, and temporal resolution. In my talk, I will focus on our recent progress on visualization of exciton and charge transport in solar energy harvesting materials from the nano to mesoscale employing ultrafast optical nanoscopy. With approaches that combine spatial and temporal resolutions, we have recently revealed a new singlet-mediated triplet transport mechanism in certain singlet fission materials. This work demonstrates a new triplet exciton transport mechanism leading to favorable long-range triplet exciton diffusion on the picosecond and nanosecond timescales for solar cell applications. We have also performed a direct measurement of carrier transport in space and in time by mapping carrier density with simultaneous ultrafast time resolution and 50 nm spatial precision in perovskite thin films using transient absorption microscopy. These results directly visualize long-range carrier transport of 220nm in 2 ns for solution-processed polycrystalline CH3NH3PbI3 thin films. The spatially and temporally resolved measurements reported here underscore the importance of the local morphology and establish an important first step towards discerning the underlying transport properties of perovskite materials.