报告时间:9月6日(周三)15:00
报告地点:科技创新大楼C501
报告题目:Cyanine dyes for optoelectronic applications
Cyanine dyes for optoelectronic applications
Abstract: Cyanines
are strongly absorbing and highly luminescent dyes consisting of a cationic
chromophore and an anionic counterion. Today they are well known as fluorescent
markers in biology and biochemistry and numerous works consist of covalently
linking the dyes to biomolecules such as proteins or sugars. Recently these
dyes have been used in optoelectronic applications, which brings them back more
closely to their original use as sensitizers in silver-halide photography.
Applied as thin films, they behave as organic semiconductors and can transport
charges and excited states, produce photocurrent or emit light. The fact that
cyanine dyes are salts offers the possibility for thin films to be poled and to
tune intrinsic semiconducting properties such as charge carrier mobility or
solubility. This presentation gives an overview of our recent developments in
the field of thin film cyanine devices highlighting visible and NIR sensitive
solar cells and photodiodes as well as light emitting electrochemical cells.
The fact that these organic semiconductors can be deposited from solution opens
up applications in the raising field of printed electronics.
Selected
publications:
1) H. Zhang et al., Solar Energy Mater Solar Cells 2013, 118, 157-164.
2) H. Zhang et al., Scientific Reports 2015, 5, 9439.
3) M. Makha et al.,Science
and Technology of Advanced Materials, 2017, 18.68-75.
4) S. Jenatsch et al, ACS
Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2016, 8, 6554?6562.
5) S. Jenatsch et al., Organic
Electronics 48 (2017) 77-84.
Biography:Frank Nüesch, Head of Laboratory at the Swiss Federal
Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology (EMPA) in Dübendorf, Honorary
Professor at Swiss federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL), obtained
a physics diploma at ETH Zurich and doctoral degree at EFPL under Professor
Michael Gr?tzel's supervision on the subject of the photochemical properties of
solar cells sensitized by colorant. In
Prof. Frank Nüesch’s Group, the main research interest is devoted to the
research and development of novel organic materials and polymers with unique
functional properties, designed for future technological applications, including
chemical synthesis, chemical and physical characterization methods as well as
thin film device fabrication.