Kinetic data-driven development of light-interacting materials

Lead Research Organisation: University of Cambridge
Department Name: Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology

Abstract

Over the past 5 years, lead halide perovskite (LHP) nanocrystals (NCs) have observed extended use in a multitude of optoelectronic applications due to their outstanding properties of which defect tolerance out competes traditionally applied chalcogenides NCs (e.g., CuInS2). Whilst significant attention has been drawn to their device performance, little recognition is paid towards their synthesis. Typically, NCs are synthesised using a batchwise hot injection protocol by which a precursor is swiftly introduced into the mother solution, containing appropriate ligands, to trigger nucleation and growth which takes place at millisecond timescales. Albeit a facile method, as-synthesised NCs suffer from dispersity in size and morphology due to the velocity at which the reaction proceeds in convolution with the time required to achieve uniform precursor concentration following injection. As a result, absence of understanding during earlier times in crystallisation renders poor control over as synthesised NCs thus detrimental optoelectronic performance. During this PhD, we attempt to probe early crystallisation kinetics of LHP and perovskite inspired materials to assess their intrinsic kinetics in governing the evolution of size and morphology. In tandem, we couple this with transient photophysical measurements to gain an understanding of defect formation during growth. Overall, we attempt to assess the interconnected relationship of synthesis, structure, and properties of confined perovskite NCs paving the way for controlled synthesis in wider optoelectronic applications.

Planned Impact

Our main impacts will be:
- a new generation of interdisciplinary nano researchers with expertise across science and innovation, fluent in the combination of approaches and technologies
- strategic developments in the study and control of nano-interfaces connecting complex architectures, for advances in emerging scientific grand challenges across vital areas of energy, health and ICT
- integration of new functional nanotechnologies together by harnessing nano-interfaces within larger application systems, and their translation into innovative products and services through our industry partners and student-led spin-outs
- a paradigm change of collaborative outlook in this science and technology
- a strong interaction with stakeholders including outreach and public engagement with cutting edge nano research
- improved use of interdisciplinary working tools including management, discipline bridging and IT

Economic impact of the new CDT is focused through our industrial engagement programme, as well as our innovation training. Our partner companies include - NPL, Hitachi, Oxford Nanopore, TWI, ARM, Eight19, Mursla, Britvic, Nokia Bell Labs, IBM, Merck, Oxford Instruments, Aixtron, Cambridge Display Technologies, Fluidic Analytics, Emberion, Schlumberger, Applied Materials and others. Such partnerships are crucial for the UK to revive high value manufacturing as the key pillar to lead for future technologies. We evidence this via the large number of CDT projects resulting in patents, with their exploitation supported by Cambridge Enterprise and our Industry Partners, and direct economic impact has also resulted from the large proportion of our students/alumni joining industry (a key outcome), or founding startups including: Echion Technologies (battery materials), Inkling Cambridge (Graphene inks and composites), HexagonFab (2D materials), Simprints (low-cost biometrics), Cortirio (rapid diagnosis of brain injury).

Training impact emerges through not just the vast array of Nano techniques and ideas that our cohorts and associated students are exposed to, but also the interdisciplinary experience that accrues to all the academics. In particular the younger researchers coming into the University are plugged into a thriving programme that connects their work to many other sciences, applications, and societal challenges. Interactions with external partners, including companies, are also strong and our intern programme will greatly strengthen training outcomes.

Academic impact is fostered by ensuring strong coherent plans for research in the early years, and also the strong focus of the whole CDT on study and control of nano-interfaces connecting complex architectures. Our track record for CDT student-led publications is already strong, including 4 Nature/Science, 6 Nature Chem/Nano/Mat, 13 Nat. Comm., with student publications receiving >6000 citations in total, including 16 papers with >100 citations each and high altmetric scores. Students have also given talks and posters at international conferences and won numerous awards/fellowships for research excellence.

Societal impacts arise from both the progression of our cohorts into their careers as well as their interaction with the media, public, and sponsors. We directly encourage a wide variety of engagement, including interaction with >5000 members of the public each year (mostly pre-university) through Nano exhibits during public events such as the Cambridge Science Festival and Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition, and also art-science collaborations to reach new audiences. We also run public policy and global challenges workshops, and will further develop this aspect with external partners. Our efforts to bring societal challenges to students' awareness frames their view of what a successful career looks like. Longer term societal impact comes directly from our engagement with partner companies creating jobs and know-how in the UK.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
EP/S022953/1 30/09/2019 30/03/2028
2748840 Studentship EP/S022953/1 30/09/2022 29/09/2026 Tariq Hussein