| Literature DB >> 35071690 |
Giovanni Pica1, Daniele Bajoni2, Giulia Grancini1.
Abstract
Electro-optical spectroscopy is nowadays a routine approach for the analysis of light induced properties and dynamical processes in matter, whose understanding is particularly crucial for the intelligent design of novel synthetic materials and the engineering and optimization of high-impact optoelectronic devices. Currently, within this field, it is the common choice to rely on multiple commercial setups, often costly and complex, which can rarely combine multiple functions at the same time with the required sensitivity, resolution, and spectral tunability (in both excitation and detection). Here, we present an innovative, compact, and low-cost system based on "three in one" components for the simultaneous electro-optical material and device characterization. It relies on compact fiber-coupled Fourier transform spectroscopy, the core of the system, enabling a fast spectral analysis to acquire simultaneously wavelength and time resolved photoluminescence (PL) maps (as a function of the time and wavelength), PL quantum yield, and electroluminescence signal. Our system bypasses conventional ones, proposing a new solution for a compact, low-cost, and user-friendly tool, while maintaining high levels of resolution and sensitivity.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35071690 PMCID: PMC8759798 DOI: 10.1063/4.0000134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Struct Dyn ISSN: 2329-7778 Impact factor: 2.920
FIG. 1.Schematic representation of the experimental setup for (a) photoluminescence and time-resolved photoluminescence, in which L, BS, DM, and LPF refer to lens, beam splitter, dichroic mirror, and long pass filter, respectively, (b) photoluminescence quantum yield, and (c) electroluminescence analysis. Red dashed square indicates that the detection part of the system remains unchanged throughout all the measurements.
FIG. 3.Examples of the photoluminescence quantum yield (a) and electroluminescence (b) measurements.
FIG. 2.Example of wavelength and time resolved photoluminescence measurements on a hybrid perovskite solar cell. Time and wavelength resolved map (a) allows the simultaneous analysis of the photoluminescence emission as a function of time (b) and wavelength (c). Typical structure of a hybrid perovskite and schematic representation of the photoluminescence mechanism.