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    AuthorAmassian, Aram (1)Cox, Ben (1)Joya, Khurram Saleem (1)Mansour, Ahmed (1)Rajagopal, Srinath (1)View MoreDepartment
    KAUST Catalysis Center (KCC) (3)
    Physical Sciences and Engineering (PSE) Division (3)Chemical Science Program (1)Investment Fund (1)KAUST Solar Center (KSC) (1)View MoreJournal2017 IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium (IUS) (1)Carbon Nanotubes, Graphene, and Emerging 2D Materials for Electronic and Photonic Devices VIII (1)PublisherInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) (1)SPIE-Intl Soc Optical Eng (1)Subjectheterojunction (1)photoelectrochemical (1)semiconductingmaterials (1)solar fuel (1)Water oxidation (1)View MoreType
    Presentation (3)
    Year (Issue Date)2017 (1)2015 (2)Item AvailabilityMetadata Only (2)Open Access (1)

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    Bromination of graphene: a new route to making high performance transparent conducting electrodes with low optical losses

    Mansour, Ahmed; Amassian, Aram; Tanielian, Minas H. (Carbon Nanotubes, Graphene, and Emerging 2D Materials for Electronic and Photonic Devices VIII, SPIE-Intl Soc Optical Eng, 2015-09-03) [Presentation]
    The high optical transmittance, electrical conductivity, flexibility and chemical stability of graphene have triggered great interest in its application as a transparent conducting electrode material and as a potential replacement for indium doped tin oxide. However, currently available large scale production methods such as chemical vapor deposition produce polycrystalline graphene, and require additional transfer process which further introduces defects and impurities resulting in a significant increase in its sheet resistance. Doping of graphene with foreign atoms has been a popular route for reducing its sheet resistance which typically comes at a significant loss in optical transmission. Herein, we report the successful bromine doping of graphene resulting in air-stable transparent conducting electrodes with up to 80% reduction of sheet resistance reaching ~180 Ω/ at the cost of 2-3% loss of optical transmission in case of few layer graphene and 0.8% in case of single layer graphene. The remarkably low tradeoff in optical transparency leads to the highest enhancements in figure of merit reported thus far. Furthermore, our results show a controlled increase in the workfunction up to 0.3 eV with the bromine content. These results should help pave the way for further development of graphene as potentially a highly transparent substitute to other transparent conducting electrodes in optoelectronic devices.
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    Photoanodic Hybrid Semiconductor–Molecular Heterojunction for Solar Water Oxidation

    Joya, Khurram Saleem; Takanabe, Kazuhiro (2015-06-29) [Presentation]
    Inorganic photo-responsive semiconducting materials have been employed in photoelectrochemical(PEC) water oxidation devicesin pursuit of solar to fuel conversion.[1]The reaction kinetics in semiconductors is limited by poor contact at the interfaces, and charge transfer is impeded by surface defects and the grain boundaries.[2]It has shown that successful surface functionalization of the photo-responsive semiconducting materials with co-catalysts can maximize the charge separation, hole delivery and its effective consumption, and enhances the efficiency and performane of the PEC based water oxidation assembly.[3]We present here unique modification of photoanodic hematite (α-Fe2O3) and bismuth vanadate (BiVO4) with molecular co-catalysts for enhanced photoelectrochemical water oxidation (Figure 1). These hybrid inorganic–organometallic heterojunctions manifest impressive cathodic shifts in the onset potentials, and the photocurrent densities have been enhanced by > 90% at all potentials relative to uncatalyzed α-Fe2O3 or BiVO4, and other catalyst-semiconductor based heterojunctions.This is a novel development in the solar to fuel conversion field, and is crucially important for designing a tandem device where light interfere very little with the catalyst layer on top of semiconducting light absorber.
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    Laser generated ultrasound sources using polymer nanocomposites for high frequency metrology

    Rajagopal, Srinath; Sainsbury, Toby; Treeby, Bradley; Cox, Ben (2017 IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium (IUS), Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 2017-11-22) [Presentation]
    Accurate characterisation of ultrasound fields generated by diagnostic and therapeutic transducers is critical for patient safety. This requires hydrophones calibrated to a traceable standard. The existing implementation of the primary standard at the National Measurement Institutes, e.g., NPL and PTB, can provide accurate calibration to a maximum frequency of 40MHz. However, the increasing use of high frequencies for both imaging and therapy necessitates calibrations to frequencies well beyond this range. For this to be possible, a source of high amplitude, broadband, quasi-planar and stable ultrasound fields is required. This is difficult to achieve using conventional piezoelectric sources, but laser generated ultrasound is a promising technique in this regard. In this study various polymer-carbon nanotube nanocomposites (PNC) were fabricated and tested for their suitability for such an application.
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