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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

NONLINEAR AND ULTRAFAST OPTICAL STUDIES OF INTERFACIAL PROCESSES IN PHOTOVOLTAIC NANOMATERIALS

FANG, HUI, 0000-0002-4024-1234 January 2020 (has links)
The development of efficient solar energy conversion devices has attracted much attention. Despite the fact that progress have been achieved, a fundamental understanding examining why efficiency can be improved remains elusive. For example, dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSC) exhibit high conversion efficiency when acetonitrile is used to prepare both the working electrode and the electrolyte. However, the mechanism explaining exactly how solvent influences device performance has not yet been systematically investigated. Another prominent example is the metal/semiconductor heterojunction systems. While it has been demonstrated that such mixed systems can significantly improve solar conversion efficiency, the mechanism of the electron dynamics driving these systems remains controversial. This stems in part from the fact that the experimentally deduced time constants, which are characteristic of such systems, are only ever extracted from phenomenological models and therefore cannot be assigned to specific physical processes. Ultimately, the development of a physical model is necessary to obtain an unambiguous physical picture of the solar conversion process. In this dissertation, the ultrafast nonlinear spectroscopic methods, second harmonic light scattering (SHS) and transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy, have been employed to study dye molecular adsorption and charge transfer dynamics in several solar energy conversion systems, including 1) DSSC, where solvent effects are investigated to understand why acetonitrile is the most effective solvent; 2) Ag/TiO2 heterostructure system, where a physical model is proposed to quantitively analyze the electron dynamics; 3) porphyrin/Ag/TiO2 nanocomposite, where we found there is no electron injection from porphyrin to TiO2 and plasmonic metal can enhance the porphyrin dye adsorption to improve the device efficiency. The propensity for surface adsorption of two related dyes, ortho-ethyl red (o-ER) and para-ethyl red (p-ER), onto TiO2 particles is studied with SHS. While p-ER readily adsorbs onto TiO2, o-ER does not. It is suggested that this difference is linked to the effects of the steric hindrance of the adsorbate. The influence of the solvent on the adsorption of p-ER onto TiO2 is also investigated. Of significance, p-ER can only chemically bond to the TiO2 surface in aprotic solvents, where adsorption free energy scales with solvent polarity. For protic solvents, preferential adsorption of the solvent shell ultimately prevents direct adsorption of p-ER onto the surface of TiO2. Likewise, solvent effects on charge transfer from p-ER to TiO2 are studied by TA. The electron injection rate is shown to be positively related to solvent polarity. Overall, highly polar aprotic solvents are shown to facilitate dye adsorption and electron injection, which helps improve the efficiency of DSSC devices. Ultrafast dynamics of plasmon-induced hot electrons from Ag to TiO2 nanorods are probed by TA. The observed transient signal, which corresponds to the lifetime of the optically generated electrons, is analyzed using a physical model including electron injection, relaxation, band edge annihilation, the surface to bulk diffusion, and back diffusion from the bulk to the surface. A ca. 13 fs electron injection time is deduced for Ag to TiO2, which is faster than that generated in Au and dyes. Additionally, the excited state exciton dynamics of a porphyrin J-aggregate are investigated and subsequently modeled. More rapid dynamics are found following aggregation of the porphyrin, which can be attributed to the inclusion of more efficient relaxation channels. However, no electron injection from the J-aggregate to TiO2 is observed. This likely stems from the negatively charged repulsion between the two components. Further, when the J-aggregate is introduced into an Ag/TiO2 system, optical excitation occurs predominantly in the J-aggregate. This stems either from direct excitation of the J-aggregate or indirect excitation through plasmon-induced resonant energy transfer from Ag. Our results indicate that plasmon can enhance the dye adsorption, which has great potential for designing more efficient plasmonic DSSC devices. / Chemistry
2

STM studies of single organic molecules on silicon carbide / Étude STM de molécules organiques individuelles à la surface de carbure de silicium

Ovramenko, Tamara 29 November 2012 (has links)
L’interaction de molécules organiques avec les surfaces semiconductrices permet de contrôler les propriétés physiques de ces dernières et ce, soit à travers une modification locale en utilisant des molécules individuelles, soit par la passivation de la surface par une mono-couche complète. Aussi, le contrôle de l’interaction moléculaire nous permet de modifier les propriétés intrinsèques des molécules à travers un découplage électronique partiel ou complet entre les orbitales moléculaires et la surface. Pour atteindre ces objectifs, cette thèse présente l’étude expérimentale de l’adsorption de molécules sur la surface semiconductrice à large gap de 6H-SiC(0001)-3x3. Les expériences ont été réalisées à l’aide d’un microscope à effet tunnel opérant dans les conditions d’Ultra-Haut Vide et de température ambiante (UHV RT-STM). Les résultats ont été comparés à des études théoriques employant des calculs selon la théorie de la fonctionnelle de la densité (DFT). Trois molécules on été étudié durant ce travail de thèse : C60, Caltrope et Trima. Les études STM et DFT montre que les molécules individuelles de C60 sont chimisorbé à la surface de carbure de silicium SiC(0001)-3x3 à travers la formation d’une seule liaison Si-C avec un seul adatome de silicium, contrairement aux autres surfaces semiconductrices où la molécule se chimisorbe en formant plusieurs liaisons. Trois sites d’adsorption par rapport à l’adatome de Si de la maille de surface ont été observés. Pour expliquer les observations STM, les forces de Van der Waals entre la molécule de C60 et les atomes de la surface voisins ont du être pris en compte dans les calculs DFT. Il a été observé aussi que les molécules de C60 forment de petits clusters même à de faibles taux de couverture ce qui indique la présence d’un état précurseur de la molécule et des interactions intermoléculaires non négligeable. La molécule de Caltrope, nouvellement synthétisée, a été étudié aussi bien sur la surface de Silicium que celle de SiC. Le dépôt de cette molécule complexe ne peut être réalisé selon la méthode d’évaporation classique sans induire sa dissociation et a donc nécessité l'emploi de techniques d’évaporation spécifiques. Nos résultats expérimentaux montrent un comportement remarquable: le dépôt de molécule individuelle est induit sur la surface de manière efficace par la pointe du STM démontrant ainsi l’idée d’imprimerie moléculaire. Suite à son adsorption sur la surface de silicium à travers une seule liaison, la molécule de Caltrope se comporte comme un moteur moléculaire activé thermiquement. La troisième molécule a être étudié est la molécule de Trima. Elle a été sélectionnée à cause de sa taille comparable à la distance des ad-atomes de silicium de la surface de SiC. La structure chimique de la molécule qui se termine par un groupement cétone rend possible la fonctionnalisation de la surface. Ceci est révélé par les calculs DFT de la densité de charge. La distribution de charge montre qu’il n’y a pas de partage entre les atomes d’oxygènes de la molécule et les ad-atomes de la surface et donc nous avons un évidence claire pour la formation d’une liaison dative. / The interaction of organic molecules with a semiconductor surface enables the physical properties of the surface to be controlled, from a local modification using individual isolated molecules to passivation using a complete monolayer. Controlling the molecular interaction also allows us to modify the intrinsic properties of the molecules by partial or complete electronic decoupling between the molecular orbitals and the surface. To this end, this thesis presents experimental studies of the adsorption of molecules on the wide band gap 6H-SiC(0001)-3×3 substrate. The experiments were performed using Ultra-High Vacuum Room Temperature Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (UHV RT STM) and the results were compared with comprehensive theoretical Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations. Three different molecules were studied in this thesis: C60, Caltrop and Trima. The STM and DFT studies show that individual C60 fullerene molecules are chemisorbed on the silicon carbide SiC(0001)-3×3 surface through the formation of a single Si-C bond to one silicon adatom, in contrast to multiple bond formation on other semiconducting surfaces. We observed three stable adsorption sites with respect to the Si adatoms of the surface unit cell. To explain the STM observations, Van der Waals forces between the C60 molecule and the neighboring surface atoms had to be included in the DFT calculations. The C60 molecules are also observed to form small clusters even at low coverage indicating the presence of a mobile molecular precursor state and non negligible intermolecular interactions. The second newly designed Caltrop molecule was studied on both the Si and SiC surfaces. Intact adsorption of this complex organic molecule cannot be realized using classical adsorption methods and requires the use of specific evaporation techniques. Our experimental results show remarkable behavior: The STM tip efficiently deposits single molecules one at a time, demonstrating the concept of single molecule printing. After adsorption on the Si surface through one bond, the Caltrop operates as a thermally activated molecular rotor. The third molecule to be studied is the Trima molecule. This molecule was chosen because it is commensurable in size with the surface Si adatom distance. The chemical termination of the molecule with a ketone group enables the successful functionalization of the SiC surface. The Trima molecule provides a rare and clear-cut example of the formation of two dative bonds between the oxygen atoms of the carbonyl groups and the Si adatoms of the SiC surface. This is revealed by the DFT calculations of the charge density. The charge distribution shows that there is no sharing of electrons between the oxygen atoms of the molecule and the surface which is clear evidence for the formation of a dative bond.

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