In situ spectroscopy and nanoscale imaging of electrochemical energy conversion and storage systems
Description:
The fundamental problem that limits the solar energy conversion efficiency of conventional semiconductors such as Si is that all absorbed photon energy above the band gap is lost as heat. The critical question that our research addresses is: Can we avoid energy losses in semiconductors? Hot-carrier systems that avoid such losses have tremendous potential in photovoltaics and solar fuels production, with theoretical efficiencies of 66% (well above the detailed-balance limit of 33%). Ultrathin 2D semiconductors such as monolayer (ML) MoS2 and WSe2 have unique physical and photophysical properties that could make hot-carrier energy conversion possible. The specific knowledge gap in the field is how the energy levels of 2D semiconductors move with applied potential and/or illumination, making the driving force for charge transfer (G0´) unclear. Since G0´ governs the hot-carrier extraction rate (kET), understanding how and why G0´ changes under solar fuel generation conditions is critical to controlling kET relative to the cooling rate. Absence of this critical information is limiting our ability to perform hot-carrier photochemistry. Our research team has employed photocurrent spectroscopy, steady-state absorption spectroscopy, and in situ femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy as a function of applied potential to characterize underlying steps in a ML MoS2 photoelectrochemical cell. The rich data set informs us on the timescales for hot-carrier generation/cooling and exciton formation/recombination, as well as the magnitudes of changes in exciton energy levels, exciton binding energies, and the electronic band gap. These findings open the possibility of tuning the hot-carrier extraction rate relative to the cooling rate to ultimately utilize hot-carriers for solar energy conversion applications.
Speaker: Justin Sambur - Colorado State University
Justin earned his B.S. degree in 2006 from the State University of New York (SUNY)-Binghamton and then earned his PhD under the direction of Dr. Bruce A. Parkinson at Colorado State University (CSU). In 2011, Justin traveled back to NY to join Prof. Peng Chen’s lab at Cornell University. Justin’s NSF ACC-F Postdoctoral Fellow work integrated single molecule imaging methods in the area of photoelectrochemistry. Justin returned to CSU in 2016 as an Assistant Professor of Chemistry and the School of Advanced Materials Discovery (SAMD). His electrochemical energy conversion and storage research has been recognized with the 2022 Royce Murray Young Investigator Award, Air Force Young Investigator Award, NSF CAREER Award, and DOE Early Career Award. Justin was also named a Sloan Research Fellow and a Scialog Fellow in Advanced Energy Storage.
Co-Authors
In situ spectroscopy and nanoscale imaging of electrochemical energy conversion and storage systems
Category
2023 Call for Invited Abstracts
Description
Session Number: S31-03
Session Type: Symposium
Session Date: Wednesday 3/22/2023
Session Time: 8:30 AM - 11:45 AM
Room Number: 124
Track: Energy
Category: Electrochemistry, Energy, Material Science
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