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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/11680
Title: NANOMATERIALS: FROM INTERFACIAL CHARACTERISTICS TO DEVICE APPLICATIONS
Authors: Wang, Kewei
Advisor: Xu, Gu
Hany Aziz, Richard A. Klenkler
Tony Petric, Igor Zhitomirsky
Department: Materials Science and Engineering
Keywords: Nanomaterials;Nanocomposites;Organic solar cells;Polymer and Organic Materials;Semiconductor and Optical Materials;Polymer and Organic Materials
Publication Date: Apr-2012
Abstract: <p>Nanomaterials have been heavily studied in the past two decades. Previous findings have demonstrated that the characteristics of nanocomposites and the performance of nanomaterial-based devices are both determined by the interfacial characteristics of the nanomaterials. However, there are still some remaining challenges from interfacial characteristics to device applications, which are specified as follows: the difficulty in identifying the interfacial contacts of nanostructured surfaces, the instability of nanocomposite surfaces, and the under-researched mechanism of the correlation between interfacial characteristics and the performance of devices.</p> <p>Therefore, the main theme of this thesis is to investigate the interfacial contacts of nanostructured solid-liquid interfaces by direct observation, and to develop a stable nanocomposite based on which the direct observation of the interfacial contact can be better conducted, and to eventually investigate the effect of interfacial contacts on the performance of organic solar cells.</p> <p>As the previous identification of the solid-liquid interface is limited to a microscale range, a direct method of tracing the different wetting states of water was developed, on nanostructured surfaces. This method provided an answer to a long standing question of, whether there is a transition from Wenzel to Cassie states in the sliding angle drop on nanocomposite thin films. In order to complete the observation of the wetting states of water, a stable superhydrophobic nanocomposite thin film with hierarchical structure was developed.</p> <p>Furthermore, with the knowledge of identifying the wetting states and the preparing procedures of the nanocomposites, a surfactant-free small-molecule nanoparticle organic solar cell with a much improved fill factor was developed by spin coating. The inverse correlation of series resistance and parallel resistance was discovered, due to the morphology change and the variation of the charge carrier concentration near the donor-acceptor interface in small-molecule organic solar cells.</p>
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/11680
Identifier: opendissertations/6631
7636
2405542
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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