Electron Dynamics in Nanomaterials for Photovoltaic Applications by Time-resolved Two-photon Photoemission

Electron Dynamics in Nanomaterials for Photovoltaic Applications by Time-resolved Two-photon Photoemission
Author: John Russell Tritsch
Publisher:
Total Pages: 212
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN:

The impetus of unsustainable consumption coupled with major environmental concerns has renewed our society's investment in new energy production methods. Solar energy is the poster child of clean, renewable energy. Its favorable environmental attributes have greatly enhanced demand resulting in a spur of development and innovation. Photovoltaics, which convert light directly into usable electrical energy, have the potential to transform future energy production. The benefit of direct conversion is nearly maintenance free operation enabling deployment directly within urban centers. The greatest challenge for photovoltaics is competing economically with current energy production methods. Lowering the cost of photovoltaics, specifically through increasing the conversion efficiency of the active absorbing layer, may enable the invisible hand to bypass bureaucracy. To accomplish the ultimate goal of increased efficiency and lowered cost, it is essential to develop new material systems that provide enhanced output or lowered cost with respect to current technologies. However, new materials require new understanding of the physical principles governing device operation. It is my hope that elucidating the dynamics and charge transfer mechanisms in novel photovoltaic material systems will lead to enhanced design principles and improved material selection. Presented is the investigation of electron dynamics in two materials systems that show great promise as active absorbers for photovoltaic applications: inorganic semiconductor quantum dots and organic semiconductors. Common to both materials is the strong Coulomb interaction due to quantum confinement in the former and the low dielectric constant in the latter. The perceived enhancement in Coulomb interaction in quantum dots is believed to result in efficient multiexciton generation (MEG), while discretization of electronic states is proposed to slow hot carrier cooling. Time-resolved two-photon photoemission (TR2PPE) is utilized to directly map out the hot electron cooling and multiplication dynamics in PbSe quantum dots. Hot electron cooling is found to proceed on ultrafast time scales (

Femtosecond Time-Resolved Laser Spectroscopic Studies on the Electron Dynamics in Heterostructured Nanomaterials

Femtosecond Time-Resolved Laser Spectroscopic Studies on the Electron Dynamics in Heterostructured Nanomaterials
Author: Chi-Hung Chuang
Publisher:
Total Pages: 233
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN:

My interest in the photoscience has been focused on the photoinduced charge carrier dynamics in heterostructured nanomaterials. Of particular interest are type-II heterostructures, where the relative band alignment of their constituent semiconductor materials promotes a spatial separation of the electron and hole following photoexcitation, a highly desirable property for photovoltaic applications. Femtosecond laser spectroscopy has been used to investigate charge transfer dynamics with a time resolution of 100 fs and better. Using femtosecond transient absorption and time-resolved photoluminescence spectroscopy, we have studied the electron versus the hole dynamics in quasi-type-II hetero-nanomaterials. By choosing the pump wavelength in resonance with the respective core and shell transitions, we were able to measure the excited electron and hole dynamics selectively. Both charge carriers transfer through the interface within one picosecond, but the subsequent relaxations of the electron and hole are very distinguishable. On the basis of our measurements and analysis from the steady-state spectra, we find that the mixed core - charge transfer states and the electron transfer occur in the Marcus inverted region. The electron transfer dynamics in organic macromolecular complexes are also of interest in this dissertation. The organic capsule named octa acid is the model system studied with femtosecond laser techniques. We believe that understanding the charge carrier dynamics in nano- and supramolecular systems will pave the way to emergent optoelectronic and photovoltaic applications based on the design of functional nanoarchitectures. Moreover, exploring novel combinations, which are earth-abundant and environmentally benign, will make photoactive nanomaterials more applicable for broader use. Heterostructured assemblies (organic and inorganic) are pivotal materials in this context.

Near-Field-Mediated Photon–Electron Interactions

Near-Field-Mediated Photon–Electron Interactions
Author: Nahid Talebi
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 267
Release: 2019-11-16
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3030338169

This book focuses on the use of novel electron microscopy techniques to further our understanding of the physics behind electron–light interactions. It introduces and discusses the methodologies for advancing the field of electron microscopy towards a better control of electron dynamics with significantly improved temporal resolutions, and explores the burgeoning field of nanooptics – the physics of light–matter interaction at the nanoscale – whose practical applications transcend numerous fields such as energy conversion, control of chemical reactions, optically induced phase transitions, quantum cryptography, and data processing. In addition to describing analytical and numerical techniques for exploring the theoretical basis of electron–light interactions, the book showcases a number of relevant case studies, such as optical modes in gold tapers probed by electron beams and investigations of optical excitations in the topological insulator Bi2Se3. The experiments featured provide an impetus to develop more relevant theoretical models, benchmark current approximations, and even more characterization tools based on coherent electron–light interactions.

Electron Dynamics in Nanoscale Metals

Electron Dynamics in Nanoscale Metals
Author: Hongjun Zheng
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2019
Genre:
ISBN:

ABSTRACTThe focus of my graduate research has been to study how size, composition, and structure, influence the optical-electronic properties of nanoscale systems. Towards this goal, I have utilized ultrafast time-resolved spectroscopy to study a series of monolayer protected clusters (MPCs) and plasmonic nanoparticles in order to elucidate carrier relaxation gold nano-systems in the hope of providing insight for improvement. As a first research accomplishment, I determined the transition size (~1.7 nm) between non-metallic and metallic electron behavior for gold nanoclusters. Having determined this characteristic transitional point, I divided subsequent research into three thrusts. The first was to expand the understanding of composition and structure domain dependence of carrier dynamics in ~1.7 nm size regime using ultrafast transient extinction spectroscopy. The second was to explore the ultrafast carrier dynamics in larger metallic nano-systems that are used widely in photo-driven applications. Primarily, my focus was to understand electron-electron scattering processes which relax in less than 500 fs. A fundamental understanding of this electron-electron scattering process is essential for understanding the quantum efficiency of utilizing the hot electrons. The last was to develop spatially resolved ultrafast spectroscopies in order to push our ability in studying structurally complicated systems such as layer materials which contain interesting optical-electronic properties but also have inherent heterogeneity problems that hinder the correlation of specific properties to the structure information. Explicitly, I developed spatially resolved two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy to fulfill this purpose.After the investigation of structure-dependent carrier relaxation dynamics at this transition point, the influence of structural modifications was characterized at the transition point. Specifically, the influence of Ag alloying on the relaxation pathways of the Au144(SR)60 cluster were studied. It was observed that the efficiency of electron-phonon coupling increased as a function of increasing silver alloying. These structure domain-dependent carrier dynamics studies were achieved by employing a state-selective pump-probe technique. Different vibration-assisted carrier relaxation channels were identified. In chapter 5, I demonstrate that excited carriers in Au144 cluster relax through three observable vibration-assisted channels, 2 THz, 1.44 THz, and 0.67 THz depends on where those carriers were located domain-dependent after excitation. These findings provided insight into carrier relaxation in the 144-atom gold cluster, and potential pathway in the modification of the carrier relaxation through structure engineer in MPCs.After the identification and characterization of the transitional point between metallic and nonmetallic nanoscale gold, two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy (2DES) was developed and utilized to study carrier relaxation in purely metallic systems. Here, plasmonic gold nanorods (NRs) were chosen as a model system of study. Leveraging the ultrafast time resolution and the ability to retrieve the homogeneous linewidth of the sample, I was able to determine the electron-electron scattering time constant to be around 150 fs for the NRs we studied. The process observed in Chapter 6 represents the build-up process of Fermi-Dirac distribution from athermal electron gas.Having observed the sensitive correlation between structural and electronic properties of nanoscale systems, I worked to develop a method designed to better directly probe structural influences. In chapter 7, I described the work of developing a spatially resolved two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy (sr-2DES), which facilitated our correlation of linear extinction and nonlinear sr-2DES signals. As a prototype experiment, thin films of aggregated CdSe nanocrystals were studied to demonstrate the combined spectral, temporal, and imaging capabilities of this method. The structural influence, i.e., the conjugation of the nanocrystal, was observed to result in a redshift of steady absorption and accelerated carrier relaxation dynamics.

Photoinduced Processes at Surfaces and in Nanomaterials

Photoinduced Processes at Surfaces and in Nanomaterials
Author: Dmitri Kilin
Publisher: ACS Symposium
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2016-07-07
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9780841230941

This ACS Book presents studies of photoinduced processes in nanomaterials that fall into the category of basic research contributing to solar energy conversion. The team of editors and chapter authors focus on photophysical and photochemical processes at surfaces of semiconductor nanostructures that are related to photovoltaic and photocatalytic applications with a broader focus on time-resolved spectroscopic monitoring of related processes in photoactive materials. The book reports short, up-to-date reviews, recent experimental data, and computational results that all contribute to an atomistic description of electronic dynamics and charge transfer induced by optical excitations and lattice vibrations.

Hard X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (HAXPES)

Hard X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (HAXPES)
Author: Joseph Woicik
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 576
Release: 2015-12-26
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3319240439

This book provides the first complete and up-to-date summary of the state of the art in HAXPES and motivates readers to harness its powerful capabilities in their own research. The chapters are written by experts. They include historical work, modern instrumentation, theory and applications. This book spans from physics to chemistry and materials science and engineering. In consideration of the rapid development of the technique, several chapters include highlights illustrating future opportunities as well.

The Chemical Bond

The Chemical Bond
Author: Ahmed Zewail
Publisher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 333
Release: 1992-05-14
Genre: Science
ISBN: 008092669X

This inspired book by some of the most influential scientists of our time--including six Nobel laureates--chronicles our emerging understanding of the chemical bond through the last nine decades and into the future. From Pauling's early structural work using x-ray and electron diffraction to Zewail's femtosecond lasers that probe molecular dynamics in real time; from Crick's molecular biology to Rich's molecular recognition, this book explores a rich tradition of scientific heritage and accomplishment. The perspectives given by Pauling, Perutz, Rich, Crick, Porter, Polanyi, Herschbach, Zewail, and Bernstein celebrate major scientific achievements in chemistry and biology with the chemical bond playing a fundamental role. In a unique presentation that also provides some lively insights into the very nature of scientific thought and discovery, The Chemical Bond: Structure and Dynamics will be of general interest to scientists, science historians, and the scientifically inclined populous.