(Press-News.org) Contact information: Simon Gelinas
sg559@cam.ac.uk
44-791-000-7489
University of Cambridge
Quantum waves at the heart of organic solar cells
By using an ultrafast camera, scientists say they have observed the very first instants following the absorption of light into artificial yet organic nanostructures and found that charges not only formed rapidly but also separated very quickly over long distances - phenomena that occur due to the wavelike nature of electrons which are governed by fundamental laws of quantum mechanics.
This result surprised scientists as such phenomena were believed to be limited to "perfect" - and expensive - inorganic structures; rather than the soft, flexible organic material believed by many to be the key to cheap, 'roll-to-roll' solar cells that could be printed at room temperatures - a very different world from the traditional but costly processing of current silicon technologies.
The study, published today in the journal Science, sheds new light on the mystery mechanism that allows positive and negative charges to be separated efficiently - a critical question that continues to puzzle scientists - and takes researchers a step closer to effectively mimicking the highly efficient ability to harvest sunlight and convert into energy, namely photosynthesis, which the natural world evolved over the course of millennia.
"This is a very surprising result. Such quantum phenomena are usually confined to perfect crystals of inorganic semiconductors, and one does not expect to see such effects in organic molecules - which are very disordered and tend to resemble a plate of cooked spaghetti rather than a crystal," said Dr Simon Gélinas, from Cambridge's Cavendish Laboratory, who led the research with colleagues from Cambridge as well as the University of California in Santa Barbara.
During the first few femtoseconds (one millionth of one billionth of a second) each charge spreads itself over multiple molecules rather than being localised to a single one. This phenomenon, known as spatial coherence, allows a charge to travel very quickly over several nanometres and escape from its oppositely charged partner - an initial step which seems to be the key to generating long-lived charges, say the researchers. This can then be used to generate electricity or for chemical reactions.
By carefully engineering the way molecules pack together, the team found that it was possible to tune the spatial coherence and to amplify - or reduce - this long-range separation. "Perhaps most importantly the results suggest that because the process is so fast it is also energy efficient, which could result in more energy out of the solar cell," said Dr Akshay Rao, a co-author on the study from the Cavendish Laboratory.
Dr Alex Chin, who led the theoretical part of the project, added that, if you look beyond the implications of the study for organic solar cells, this is a clear demonstration of "how fundamental quantum-mechanical processes, such as coherence, play a crucial role in disordered organic and biological systems and can be harnessed in new quantum technologies".
INFORMATION:
The work at Cambridge forms part of a broader initiative to harness high tech knowledge in the physics sciences to tackle global challenges such as climate change and renewable energy. This initiative is backed by both the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) and the Cambridge Winton Programme for the Physics of Sustainability. The work at the University of California in Santa Barbara was supported by the Center for Energy Efficient Materials, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences under Award #DC0001009.
Quantum waves at the heart of organic solar cells
2013-12-13
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
How Wagner's operas held secrets of his disabling migraines and headaches
2013-12-13
How Wagner's operas held secrets of his disabling migraines and headaches
Medical histories: 'Compulsive plague! Pain without end!' How Richard Wagner played out his migraine in the opera Siegfried
In a paper published in the Christmas edition of The BMJ, researchers ...
Rapid evolution of novel forms: Environmental change triggers inborn capacity for adaptation
2013-12-13
Rapid evolution of novel forms: Environmental change triggers inborn capacity for adaptation
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (December 12, 2013) – In the classical view of evolution, species experience spontaneous genetic mutations that produce various novel traits—some ...
Scientists discover double meaning in genetic code
2013-12-13
Scientists discover double meaning in genetic code
Discovery casts new light on how changes to DNA impact health and disease
Scientists have discovered a second code hiding within DNA. This second code contains information that changes how scientists read the instructions ...
Mayo Clinic: First in-human trial of endoxifen shows promise as breast cancer treatment
2013-12-13
Mayo Clinic: First in-human trial of endoxifen shows promise as breast cancer treatment
ROCHESTER, Minn. -- A Phase I trial of endoxifen, an active metabolite of the cancer drug tamoxifen, indicates that the experimental drug is safe, with early evidence for anti-tumor activity, ...
Speeding up gene discovery
2013-12-13
Speeding up gene discovery
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Since the completion of the Human Genome Project, which identified nearly 20,000 protein-coding genes, scientists have been trying to decipher the roles of those genes. A new approach developed at MIT, the Broad ...
Younger, early breast cancer patients often undergo unnecessary staging, imaging procedures at time
2013-12-13
Younger, early breast cancer patients often undergo unnecessary staging, imaging procedures at time
Abstract #P3-06-02
SAN ANTONIO ¬¬– More than one third of younger, early stage breast cancer patients undergo unnecessary imaging procedures ...
US ranks near bottom among industrialized nations in efficiency of health care spending
2013-12-13
US ranks near bottom among industrialized nations in efficiency of health care spending
UCLA, McGill study also shows women fare worse than men in most countries
A new study by researchers at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health and McGill ...
Noble gas molecule discovered in space
2013-12-13
Noble gas molecule discovered in space
A molecule containing a noble gas has been discovered in space by a team including astronomers from Cardiff University.
The find was made using a Cardiff-led instrument aboard Europe's Herschel Space Observatory. The ...
With new study, aquatic comb jelly floats into new evolutionary position
2013-12-13
With new study, aquatic comb jelly floats into new evolutionary position
Study calls for a shift in understanding of how complex cell types evolved
In a study that compares the genomes of aquatic life forms, researchers have found ...
Blind cavefish offer evidence for alternative mechanism of evolutionary change
2013-12-13
Blind cavefish offer evidence for alternative mechanism of evolutionary change
WOODS HOLE, Mass.—In a blind fish that dwells in deep, dark Mexican caves, scientists have found evidence for a long-debated mechanism of evolutionary change that is distinct from natural ...