Proceedings Article | 23 May 2018
Yidenekachew Donie, Anna Osypka, Radwanul Siddique, Tsvetelina Merdzhanova, Vikas Voggu , Brian Korgel, Jan Preinfalk, Amos Egel, Hendrik Hölscher, Uli Lemmer, Guillaume Gomard
KEYWORDS: Nanostructures, Polymers, Light harvesting, Lithography, Nanolithography, Electron beam lithography, Lithium, Photovoltaics, Solar cells, Photonic nanostructures
Over the last couple of years, photonic materials with tailored -i.e. with deliberately introduced- structural disorder have attracted considerable interest in photovoltaics due to their extended spectral and angular range of effectiveness [1]. Notably, quasi-random nanostructures realized by e-beam lithography (EBL) have been integrated in solar cells as broadband light trapping elements, and have proved to approach the theoretical (Lambertian) limit [2]. Despite recent research efforts aiming at increasing the EBL writing speed [3], alternative routes based on self-assemblies still possess major advantages for an industrial implementation of disordered structures as they allow to rapidly process them over large areas (>>cm2).
In this communication, we show that the up-scalable polymer blend lithography technique can be used as a versa-tile platform for fabricating 2D planar, disordered nanostructures that can be exploited in both top-down and bottom-up strategies. Tailored disorder is achieved here by adjusting the process parameters (polymer blend composition and deposition conditions), enabling to tune the morphology and the spatial distribution of the nanostructures produced, and in turn their light harvesting properties.
We first use our approach to pattern a resist etching mask, which is employed for transferring disordered nanoholes into a thin hydrogenated amorphous silicon layer by dry etching (top-down route). We report an enhancement of its integrated absorption of +90% under normal incidence, and of up to +200% at large incident angles with respect to an unprocessed absorber [4]. In a second example, we demonstrate that similar structures can serve as a template in a bottom-up configuration, whereby copper indium diselenide nanocrystals are infiltrated into the disordered nano-holes formed in a resist layer. This route, paving the way to wet-processable "photonized" absorbers, is compared to a previous work relying on a serial writing process [5], and the optical properties of the resulting patterned absorbing layers are analysed.
We finally elaborate on the significance of these findings for the reverse problem, namely for light extraction in broadband light-emitting diodes.
References
[1] Burresi, M., Pratesi, F., Riboli, F., & Wiersma, D. S. (2015). Complex photonic structures for light harvesting. Advanced Optical Materials, 3(6), 722-743.
[2] Martins, E. R., Li, J., Liu, Y., Depauw, V., Chen, Z., Zhou, J., & Krauss, T. F. (2013). Deterministic quasi-random nanostructures for photon control. Nature communications, 4, 2665.
[3] Li, K., Li, J., Reardon, C., Schuster, C. S., Wang, Y., Triggs, G. J., ... & Krauss, T. F. (2016). High speed e-beam writing for large area photonic nanostructures—a choice of parameters. Scientific reports, 6.
[4] Siddique, R. H., Donie, Y. J., Gomard, G., Yalamanchili, S., Merdzhanova, T., Lemmer, U., & Hölscher, H. (2017). Bioinspired phase-separated disordered nanostructures for thin photovoltaic absorbers. Science Advances, 3(10), e1700232.
[5] Dottermusch, S., Quintilla, A., Gomard, G., Roslizar, A., Voggu, V. R., Simonsen, B. A., ... & Richards, B. S. (2017). Infiltrated photonic crystals for light-trapping in CuInSe2 nanocrystal-based solar cells. Optics Express, 25(12), A502-A514.