With emerging advanced optical sensing technologies and their wide-ranging applications, gathering comprehensive optical data from real-world scenes is becoming increasingly crucial for their accurate reconstruction and analysis. In order to capture both three-dimensional (3D) spatial and spectral information from a scene, multiple devices or time-intensive scanning processes are often involved. Here, we demonstrate a multispectral light field camera that allows for the simultaneous acquisition of 3D information and spectral data in a single snapshot.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrganic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) are promising lighting solutions for sustainability and energy efficiency. Incorporating thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) molecules enables OLEDs to achieve internal quantum efficiency (IQE), in principle, up to 100 %; therefore, new classes of promising TADF emitters and modifications of existing ones are sought after. This study explores the TADF emission properties of six designed TADF emitters, examining their photophysical responses using experimental and theoretical methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOptical interference filters (OIFs) are vital components for a wide range of optical and photonic systems. They are pivotal in controlling spectral transmission and reflection upon demand. OIFs rely on optical interference of the incident wave at multilayers, which are fabricated with nanometer precision.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerovskite nanocrystals (PNCs) bear a huge potential for widespread applications, such as color conversion, X-ray scintillators, and active laser media. However, the poor intrinsic stability and high susceptibility to environmental stimuli including moisture and oxygen have become bottlenecks of PNC materials for commercialization. Appropriate barrier material design can efficiently improve the stability of the PNCs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFlexible thermoelectric devices show great promise as sustainable power units for the exponentially increasing self-powered wearable electronics and ultra-widely distributed wireless sensor networks. While exciting proof-of-concept demonstrations have been reported, their large-scale implementation is impeded by unsatisfactory device performance and costly device fabrication techniques. Here, we develop AgSe-based thermoelectric films and flexible devices via inkjet printing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHighly sensitive microfiber strain sensors are promising for the detection of mechanical deformations in applications where limited space is available. In particular for in situ battery thickness monitoring where high resolution and low detection limit are key requirements. Herein, the realization of a highly sensitive strain sensor for in situ lithium-ion (Li-ion) battery thickness monitoring is presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerovskite gain materials can sustain continuous-wave lasing at room-temperature. A first step toward the unachieved goal of electrically excited lasing would be an improvement in gain when electrical stimulation is added to the optical. However, to date, electrical stimulation supplementing optical has reduced gain performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
February 2023
To date, thermal nanoimprint lithography (NIL) for patterning hybrid perovskites has always involved an intricate etching step of a hard stamp material or its master. Here, we demonstrate for the first time the successful nanopatterning of a perovskite film by NIL with a low-cost polymeric stamp. The stamp consists of a dichromated gelatin grating structured by holographic lithography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe thermoelectric generator (TEG) shows great promise for energy harvesting and waste heat recovery applications. Cost barriers for this technology could be overcome by using printing technologies. However, the development of thermoelectric (TE) materials that combine printability, high-efficiency, and mechanical flexibility is a serious challenge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFully-printed temperature sensor arrays-based on a flexible substrate and featuring a high spatial-temperature resolution-are immensely advantageous across a host of disciplines. These range from healthcare, quality and environmental monitoring to emerging technologies, such as artificial skins in soft robotics. Other noteworthy applications extend to the fields of power electronics and microelectronics, particularly thermal management for multi-core processor chips.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBragg mirrors are widely applied in optical and photonic devices due to their capability of light management. However, the fabrication of Bragg mirrors is mainly accomplished by physical and chemical vapor deposition processes, which are costly and do not allow for lateral patterning. Here, the fabrication of Bragg mirrors by fully inkjet printing is reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt has been a challenge to obtain high electrical conductivity in inorganic printed thermoelectric (TE) films due to their high interfacial resistance. In this work, we report a facile synthesis process of Cu-Se-based printable ink for screen printing. A highly conducting TE β-CuSe phase forms in the screen-printed Cu-Se-based film through ≤10 ms sintering using photonic-curing technology, minimizing the interfacial resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDefect states are known to trigger trap-assisted nonradiative recombination, restricting the performance of perovskite solar cells (PSCs). Here, we investigate the trap states in long-term thermally stressed methylammonium lead iodide (MAPbI) perovskite thin films over 500 h at 85 °C employing thermally stimulated current measurements. A prominent deep trap level was detected with an activation energy of ∼0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt has been a substantial challenge to develop a printed thermoelectric (TE) material with a figure-of-merit > 1. In this work, high p-type BiSbTe-based printable TE materials have been advanced by interface modification of the TE grains with a nonstoichiometric β-CuSe-based inorganic binder (IB) through a facile printing-sintering process. As a result, a very high TE power factor of ∼17.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhile various nanophotonic structures applicable to relatively thin crystalline silicon-based solar cells were proposed to ensure effective light in-coupling and light trapping in the absorber, it is of great importance to evaluate their performance on the solar module level under realistic irradiation conditions. Here, we analyze the annual energy yield of relatively thin (crystalline silicon (c-Si) wafer thickness between 5 μm and 80 μm) heterojunction (HJT) solar module architectures when optimized anti-reflective and light trapping titanium dioxide (TiO) nanodisk square arrays are applied on the front and rear cell interfaces, respectively. Our numerical study shows that upon reducing c-Si wafer thickness down to 5 μm, the relative increase of the annual energy yield can go up to 23.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNarrow-band gap (NBG) Sn-Pb perovskites with band gaps of ∼1.2 eV, which correspond to a broad photon absorption range up to ∼1033 nm, are highly promising candidates for bottom solar cells in all-perovskite tandem photovoltaics. To exploit their potential, avoiding optical losses in the top layer stacks of the tandem configuration is essential.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA composite material of plasmonic nanoparticles embedded in a scaffold of nano-porous silicon offers unmatched capabilities for use as a SERS substrate. The marriage of these components presents an exclusive combination of tightly focused amplification of Localised Surface Plasmon (LSP) fields inside the material with an extremely high surface-to-volume ratio. This provides favourable conditions for a single molecule or extremely low concentration detection by SERS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe spontaneous phase separation of two or more polymers is a thermodynamic process that can take place in both biological and synthetic materials and which results in the structuring of the matter from the micro- to the nanoscale. For photonic applications, it allows forming quasi-periodic or disordered assemblies of light scatterers at high throughput and low cost. The wet process methods currently used to fabricate phase-separated nanostructures (PSNs) limit the design possibilities, which in turn hinders the deployment of PSNs in commercialized products.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
April 2021
One of the great challenges of hybrid organic-inorganic perovskite photovoltaics is the material's stability at elevated temperatures. Over the past years, significant progress has been achieved in the field by compositional engineering of perovskite semiconductors, e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecently, continuous-wave (CW) lasing was demonstrated at room temperature in quasi-2D perovskites. For 3D films, CW lasing at room temperature remains challenging. Issues hampering 3D materials include the temperature dependence of the (a) distribution of carrier energies, (b) buildup of photoinduced nonradiative channels, and (c) rates of bimolecular versus Auger recombination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA limiting factor in organic solar cells (OSCs) is the incomplete absorption in the thin absorber layer. One concept to enhance absorption is to apply an optical cavity design. In this study, the performance of an OSC with cavity is evaluated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany insect species rely on the polarization properties of object-reflected light for vital tasks like water or host detection. Unfortunately, typical glass-encapsulated photovoltaic modules, which are expected to cover increasingly large surfaces in the coming years, inadvertently attract various species of water-seeking aquatic insects by the horizontally polarized light they reflect. Such polarized light pollution can be extremely harmful to the entomofauna if polarotactic aquatic insects are trapped by this attractive light signal and perish before reproduction, or if they lay their eggs in unsuitable locations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChirality is essential in nature and often pivotal for biological information transfer, for example, via odor messenger molecules. While the human nose can distinguish the enantiomers of many chiral odors, the technical realization by an artificial sensor or an electronic nose, e-nose, remains a challenge. Herein, we present an array of six sensors coated with nanoporous metal-organic framework (MOF) films of different homochiral and achiral structures, working as an enantioselective e-nose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral photophysical properties of chromophores depend crucially on intermolecular interactions. Thermally-activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) is often influenced by close packing of the chromophore assembly. In this context, the metal-organic framework (MOF) approach has several advantages: it can be used to steer aggregation such that the orientation within aggregated structures can be predicted using rational approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTabanid flies (Diptera: Tabanidae) are attracted to shiny black targets, prefer warmer hosts against colder ones and generally attack them in sunshine. Horizontally polarised light reflected from surfaces means water for water-seeking male and female tabanids. A shiny black target above the ground, reflecting light with high degrees and various directions of linear polarisation is recognised as a host animal by female tabanids seeking for blood.
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