MRS Meetings and Events

 

CH01.02.08 2022 MRS Fall Meeting

Insights into the Kinetics and Self-Assembly Order of Hybrid Small-Molecule Organic Semiconductor / Quantum Dot Blends During Blade Coating

When and Where

Nov 28, 2022
4:15pm - 4:30pm

Hynes, Level 1, Room 102

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Daniel Toolan1,Michael Weir2,Richard Jones3,Anthony Ryan1

Department of Chemistry, The University of Sheffield1,The University of Nottingham2,The University of Manchester3

Abstract

Daniel Toolan1,Michael Weir2,Richard Jones3,Anthony Ryan1

Department of Chemistry, The University of Sheffield1,The University of Nottingham2,The University of Manchester3
Hybrid organic-inorganic nanocomposite films formed from blends of small-molecule organic semiconductors and colloidal quantum dots are attractive candidates for high efficiency, low-cost solar energy harvesting devices. Understanding and controlling the self-assembly of the resulting hybrid material is crucial in optimising device performance, not only at a lab-scale but for large-scale, high-throughput printing and coating methods. This talk will show how <i>in situ</i> grazing incidence X-ray scattering (GIXS) gives direct insights into how small-molecule organic semiconductors and colloidal quantum dots self-assemble during blade coating. Results show that for two blends separated only by a small difference in the structure of the small molecule forming the organic phase, crystallisation may proceed down two distinct routes. It either occurs spontaneously or is mediated by the formation of quantum dot aggregates. Irrespective of the initial crystallisation route, the small-molecule crystallisation acts to exclude the quantum dot inclusions from the growing crystalline matrix phase. These results provide important fundamental understanding of structure formation in nanocomposite films of organic small molecules and colloidal quantum dots prepared via solution processing routes. This works highlights the fundamental difference to structural evolution which can be made by seemingly small changes in system composition. It provides routes for the structural design and optimisation of solution-processed hybrid nanocomposites that are compatible with the large scale deposition manufacturing techniques that are crucial in driving their wider adoption in energy harvesting applications.

Keywords

nanoscale

Symposium Organizers

Dongsheng Li, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Qian Chen, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Yu Han, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
Barnaby Levin, Direct Electron LP

Symposium Support

Bronze
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
MilliporeSigma

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature