scholarly journals Technical‐scale Biophotovoltaics for long‐term photo‐current generation from Synechocystis sp PCC6803

Author(s):  
Bin Lai ◽  
Hans Schneider ◽  
Jenny Tschörtner ◽  
Andreas Schmid ◽  
Jens O. Krömer

2005 ◽  
Vol 32 (9) ◽  
pp. 807 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saowarath Jantaro ◽  
Paula Mulo ◽  
Tove Jansén ◽  
Aran Incharoensakdi ◽  
Pirkko Mäenpää

Salinity is considered to be one of the most severe problems in worldwide agricultural production, but the published investigations give contradictory results of the effect of ionic and osmotic stresses on photosynthesis. In the present study, long-term effects of both ionic and osmotic stresses, especially on photosynthesis, were investigated using the moderately halotolerant cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Our results show that the PSII activity and the photosynthetic capacity tolerated NaCl but a high concentration of sorbitol completely inhibited both activities. In line with these results, we show that the amount of the D1 protein of PSII was decreased under severe osmotic stress, whereas the levels of PsaA / B and NdhF3 proteins remained unchanged. However, high concentrations of sorbitol stress led to a drastic decrease of both psbA (encoding D1) and psaA (encoding PsaA) transcripts, suggesting that severe osmotic stress may abolish the tight coordination of transcription and translation normally present in bacteria, at least in the case of the psaA gene. Taken together, our results indicate that the osmotic stress component is more detrimental to photosynthesis than the ionic one and, furthermore, under osmotic stress, the D1 protein appears to be the target of this stress treatment.





2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Koushik Chakraborty ◽  
Sankalpita Chakrabarty ◽  
Sk. Ibrahim ◽  
Tanusri Pal ◽  
Surajit Ghosh


2010 ◽  
Vol 2010 (1) ◽  
pp. 000867-000873
Author(s):  
J. Goehre ◽  
M. Schneider-Ramelow ◽  
K.-F. Becker ◽  
M. Hutter

Immersion Ag is currently being discussed as an innovative alternative to Ni/Au and Ni/Pd/Au metallization for PCBs in COB technology. Its advantages over conventional metallizations include its non-toxicity, due to the absence of Ni, and significantly lower costs, as Au and Pd are not required. Immersion Ag is also easily processed in die attach or SMD processes using adhesives or solder and is compatible with wire bonding. The first generations of immersion Ag in the 1990s were handicapped by a lack of storage capability. The Ag quickly reacted with oxygen and sulfur in the surrounding atmosphere and, after only a few hours of storage, high quality wire bonding was no longer viable. The current generation of immersion Ag was primarily developed to ensure long-term processability for solder technology. However, its suitability for wire bonding and other COB processes, such as glob topping, after periods of storage in non-inert atmospheres had not yet been verified. This paper addresses this issue, presenting the results of wire bonding tests in initial state and after periods of storage in inert and non-inert atmosphere, as well as after die attach processes using adhesives and solder. In addition, the suitability of immersion Ag for die attach with adhesives and solder, as well as processability for glob-top encapsulation, was investigated. Finally, the results from reliability tests on open and encapsulated samples are presented. The results show that wire bonding on immersion Ag yields bonds of high initial quality and superior reliability even after storage in non-inert atmosphere for several months prior to wire bonding. The same was true of samples that had been exposed to soldering or gluing processes. In addition, immersion Ag performed exceptionally well in other COB processes, confirming its suitability as a universal surface finish for COB technology.





RSC Advances ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (62) ◽  
pp. 56747-56755 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jihun Kim ◽  
Horim Lee ◽  
Dong Young Kim ◽  
Yongsok Seo

Metal-free organic dyes comprising donor, electron-conducting, and acceptor moieties with anchoring groups were synthesized for the sensitization of hierarchically structured TiO2 (HS-TiO2) nanoaggregates of TiO2 electrode.





2007 ◽  
Vol 144 (4) ◽  
pp. 1946-1959 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marion Eisenhut ◽  
Eneas Aguirre von Wobeser ◽  
Ludwig Jonas ◽  
Hendrik Schubert ◽  
Bas W. Ibelings ◽  
...  


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Silvina Pugliese

<p>The development of efficient and low cost photovoltaic technologies is key to a more sustainable energy pathway for future generations. Research efforts aimed at improving the performance of organic photovoltaic (OPV) materials have resulted in a continuous growth in power conversion efficiency (PCE) over time, with a recent maximum PCE value of 18.22% in a single bulk heterojunction device. However, further improved efficiency, stability and cost reduction are required in order for OPVs to succeed in the market.   To produce better performing OPV devices in a rational way, it is necessary to understand the relationships between material properties (e.g. energy levels, recombination rates, charge carrier mobilities) and the photovoltaic parameters. This requires combining different fundamental techniques, such as spectroscopic, electrical and structural studies of the materials. In this thesis work we contribute to the understanding of the mechanisms of charge photo-current generation in OPV layers by using transient absorption spectroscopy (TAS) to directly measure the fate of the photo-excited species created upon light absorption. In particular, we contribute to the understanding of the dynamical properties of tightly bound, interfacial charge-transfer (CT) states at the donor:acceptor heterojunction. We disentangle the contributions from individual transient species to the overall TAS signal via the soft-modelling algorithm known as Multivariate Curve Resolution by Alternating Least Squares (MCR-ALS), and we use simple kinetic models to retrieve associated kinetic rates.   Our first study explores the photo-physics of a family of polymers derived from the low-band-gap alternating copolymer PTBT where the sulphur atom in the thiadiazole unit was substituted with oxygen or selenium. The literature shows that replacing a single atom in the donor or acceptor unit of a polymer donor can cause large changes in the photovoltaic parameters, which cannot be explained considering only the variations in the optical band-gap. Opposite results have been reported on systems where a sulfur atom is replaced by selenium, and spectroscopic studies were lacking. Our TAS results on PTBO and PTBSe systems explain the superior photovoltaic performance of the original sulfur-containing variant PTBT, highlighting the low tolerance of these materials to backbone substitutions. In both PTBO and PTBSe systems, we identify strong recombination of geminate CT pairs as the major limiting factor of the Jsc and FF photovoltaic parameters. This is attributed to unfavourable electronic and conformational properties at the donor:acceptor interface. In the particular case of PTBSe:PC61BM, the recombination pathway of CT states with triplet character into the triplet exciton manifold is facilitated by the heavy atom effect, in addition to a highly intermixed morphology.   Our second study comprises the spectroscopic comparison between fullerene and nonfullerene (NFA) OPV layers. The PCE of OPV devices was reaching a plateau in past years, which was overcomed thanks to the development of high efficiency NFA acceptors. Here, we compare charge generation and recombination between three systems featuring the same polymer donor PPDT2FBT matched with three different acceptors, namely the fullerene acceptor PC70BM, the small molecule nonfullerene acceptor NIDCS-HO and the polymeric acceptor N2200. Our results provide insight on the processes that limit the performance of each device, showing that small molecule NFA are promising acceptors, since morphology and disorder, the factors that we have found to be limiting the device performance, could potentially be tuned for the development of more efficient materials. For the all-polymer device based on the N2200 acceptor, we find that both geminate and nongeminate recombination are limiting the photovoltaic performance.  Lastly, we investigate charge carrier dynamics in a series of solar devices composed predominantly of C60 and small amounts of organic small molecule donors, where their CT state energies are systematically varied. The well-defined microstructure in low-donor-content OPV blends makes it easier to correlate macroscopic properties to molecular parameters. Our results, in combination with time-delayed collection field (TDCF), and external quantum efficiency measurements (EQE) measurements at different bias performed by our collaborators, allow us to identify geminate recombination as the major loss channel. We find that the dynamics of the CT decay are connected to the CT state energy via the energy-gap law. In this way, the energy of the CT state is identified as the main parameter determining the efficiency of photocurrent generation in these morphologically well-defined donor:acceptor blends.  Overall, the contributions in this thesis work demonstrate how TAS measurements can provide valuable information to construct a comprehensive picture of the underpinning mechanisms of charge photo-current generation in OPV layers, in particular by isolating the dynamical properties of interfacial charge-transfer (CT) states at the donor:acceptor heterojunction via modelling.</p>





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