Publications

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2024
Haque, S., M. Alexandre, A. T. Vicente, K. Li, C. S. Schuster, S. Yang, H. Águas, R. Martins, R. A. S. Ferreira, and MJ Mendes. "Photon shifting and trapping in perovskite solar cells for improved efficiency and stability." Light: Science and Applications. 13 (2024). AbstractWebsite
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Akalin, S. A., T. Mateus, G. Ribeiro, J. Deuermeier, T. Calmeiro, H. Águas, R. Martins, A. T. Vicente, MJ Mendes, and U. D. Yilmazer Menda. "Ultra-flexible, high-performing NAN transparent electrodes for bendable optoelectronic applications." Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Electronics. 35 (2024). AbstractWebsite
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2023
Santos, I. M., M. Alexandre, V. D. Mihailetchi, J. A. Silva, T. Mateus, A. Mouquinho, J. Boane, A. T. Vicente, D. Nunes, U. D. Menda, H. Águas, E. Fortunato, R. Martins, and MJ Mendes. "Optically-Boosted Planar IBC Solar Cells with Electrically-Harmless Photonic Nanocoatings." Advanced Optical Materials. 11 (2023). AbstractWebsite
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2022
Haque, Sirazul, Miguel Alexandre, Clemens Baretzky, Daniele Rossi, Francesca De Rossi, António T. Vicente, Francesca Brunetti, Hugo Águas, Rute A. S. Ferreira, Elvira Fortunato, Matthias Auf der Maur, Uli Würfel, Rodrigo Martins, and Manuel J. Mendes. "Photonic-Structured Perovskite Solar Cells: Detailed Optoelectronic Analysis." ACS Photonics. 9 (2022): 2408-2421. AbstractWebsite
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2019
Vieira, F., B. Sarmento, A. S. Reis-Machado, J. Facão, M. J. Carvalho, MJ Mendes, E. Fortunato, and R. Martins. "{Prediction of sunlight-driven CO2 conversion: Producing methane from photovoltaics, and full system design for single-house application}." Materials Today Energy. 14 (2019). Abstract

CO2 capture and utilization (CCU) technologies are being immensely researched as means to close the anthropogenic carbon cycle. One approach known as artificial photosynthesis uses solar energy from photovoltaics (PV), carbon dioxide and water to generate hydrocarbon fuels, being methane (CH4) a preferential target due to the already in place infrastructures for its storage, distribution and consumption. Here, a model is developed to simulate a direct (1-step) solar methane production approach, which is studied in two scenarios: first, we compare it against a more conventional 2-step methane production route, and second, we apply it to address the energetic needs of concept buildings with usual space and domestic hot water heating requirements. The analysed 2-step process consists in the PV-powered synthesis of an intermediate fuel – syngas – followed by its conversion to CH4 via a Fischer–Tropsch (methanation) process. It was found that the 1-step route could be adequate to a domestic, small scale use, potentially providing energy for a single-family house, whilst the 2-step can be used in both small and large scale applications, from domestic to industrial uses. In terms of overall solar-to-CH4 energy efficiency, the 2-step method reaches 13.26{%} against the 9.18{%} reached by the 1-step method. Next, the application of the direct solar methane technology is analysed for domestic buildings, in different European locations, equipped with a combination of solar thermal collectors (STCs) and PV panels, in which the heating needs that cannot be fulfilled by the STCs are satisfied by the combustion of methane synthesized by the PV-powered electrolyzers. Various combinations of situations for a whole year were studied and it was found that this auxiliary system can produce, per m2 of PV area, in the worst case scenario 23.6 g/day (0.328 kWh/day) of methane in Stockholm, and in the best case scenario 47.4 g/day (0.658 kWh/day) in Lisbon.

2017
Vicente, António T., Andreia Araújo, Diana Gaspar, Lídia Santos, Ana C. Marques, Manuel J. Mendes, LuÍs Pereira, Elvira Fortunato, and Rodrigo Martins. "{Optoelectronics and Bio Devices on Paper Powered by Solar Cells}." Nanostructured Solar Cells. InTech, 2017. Abstract

The employment of printing techniques as cost-effective methods to fabricate low cost, flexible, disposable and sustainable solar cells is intimately dependent on the substrate properties and the adequate electronic devices to be powered by them. Among such devices, there is currently a growing interest in the development of user-oriented and multipurpose systems for intelligent packaging or on-site medical diagnostics, which would greatly benefit from printable solar cells as their energy source for autonomous operation. This chapter first describes and analyzes different types of cellulose-based substrates for flexible and cost effective optoelectronic and bio devices to be powered by printed solar cells. Cellulose is one of the most promising platforms for green recyclable electronics and it is fully compatible with large-scale printing techniques, although some critical requirements must be addressed. Paper substrates exist in many forms. From common office paper, to packaging cardboard used in the food industry, or nanoscale engineered cellulose (e.g. bacterial cellulose). However, it is the structure and content of paper that determines its end use. Secondly, proof-of-concept of optoelectronic and bio devices pro-duced by inkjet printing are described and show the usefulness of solar cells as a power source or as a chemical reaction initiator for sensors.

Vicente, A. T., PJ Wojcik, MJ Mendes, H. Águas, E. Fortunato, and R. Martins. "{A statistics modeling approach for the optimization of thin film photovoltaic devices}." Solar Energy. 144 (2017). Abstract

© 2017 The growing interest in exploring thin film technologies to produce low cost devices such as n-i-p silicon solar cells, with outstanding performances and capability to address the highly relevant energy market, turns the optimization of their fabrication process a key area of development. The usual one-dimensional analysis of the involved parameters makes it difficult and time consuming to find the optimal set of conditions. To overcome these difficulties, the combination of experimental design and statistical analysis provides the tools to explore in a multidimensional fashion the interactions between fabrication parameters and expected experimental outputs. Design of Experiment and Multivariate Analysis are demonstrated here for the optimization of: (1) the low temperature deposition (150 °C) of high quality intrinsic amorphous silicon (i-a-Si:H); and (2) the matching of the n-, i-, and p-silicon layers thickness to maximize the efficiency of thin film solar cells. The multiple regression method applied, validated through analysis of variance and evaluated against exact numerical simulations, is shown to predict the overall intrinsic layer properties and the devices performance. The results confirm that experimental design and statistical data analysis are effective approaches to improve, within a minimum time frame and high certainty, the properties of silicon thin films, and subsequently the layer structure of solar cells.

2016
Mendes, Manuel J., Andreia Araújo, António Vicente, Hugo Águas, Isabel Ferreira, Elvira Fortunato, and Rodrigo Martins. "{Design of optimized wave-optical spheroidal nanostructures for photonic-enhanced solar cells}." Nano Energy. 26 (2016): 286-296. AbstractWebsite

The interaction of light with wavelength-sized photonic nanostructures is highly promising for light management applied to thin-film photovoltaics. Several light trapping effects come into play in the wave optics regime of such structures that crucially depend on the parameters of the photonic and absorbing elements. Thus, multi-parameter optimizations employing exact numerical models, as performed in this work, are essential to determine the maximum photocurrent enhancement that can be produced in solar cells.Generalized spheroidal geometries and high-index dielectric materials are considered here to model the design of the optical elements providing broadband absorption enhancement in planar silicon solar cells. The physical mechanisms responsible for such enhancement are schematized in a spectral diagram, providing a deeper understanding of the advantageous characteristics of the optimized geometries. The best structures, composed of TiO2 half-spheroids patterned on the cells' top surface, yield two times higher photocurrent (up to 32.5 mA/cm2 in 1.5 $μ$m thick silicon layer) than the same devices without photonic schemes.These results set the state-of-the-art closer to the theoretical Lambertian limit. In addition, the considered light trapping designs are not affected by the traditional compromise between absorption enhancement versus current degradation by recombination, which is a key technological advantage.

Morawiec, S., J. Holovský, MJ Mendes, M. Müller, K. Ganzerová, A. Vetushka, M. Ledinský, F. Priolo, A. Fejfar, and I. Crupi. "{Experimental quantification of useful and parasitic absorption of light in plasmon-enhanced thin silicon films for solar cells application}." Scientific Reports (2016). AbstractWebsite
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Lyubchyk, A., A. Vicente, P. U. Alves, B. Catela, B. Soule, T. Mateus, MJ Mendes, H. Águas, E. Fortunato, and R. Martins. "{Influence of post-deposition annealing on electrical and optical properties of ZnO-based TCOs deposited at room temperature}." Physica Status Solidi (A) Applications and Materials Science. 213 (2016). Abstract

© 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH {&} Co. KGaA, Weinheim The post-deposition modification of ZnO-based transparent conductive oxides (TCOs) can be the key to produce thin films with optoelectronic properties similar to indium tin oxide (ITO), but at a much lower cost. Here, we present electro-optical results achieved for post-deposition annealing of Al–Zn–O (AZO), AZO:H, Ga–Zn–O:H (GZO:H), and Zn–O:H (ZNO:H) thin films deposited by RF sputtering at room temperature. These studies comprise results of thermal annealing at atmospheric pressure, vacuum, forming gas, H2and Ar atmospheres, and H2and Ar plasmas, which lead to significant enhancement of their electro-optical properties, which are correlated to morphological and structural improvements. The post-deposition annealing leads to an enhancement in resistivity above 40{%} for AZO, AZO:H, and GZO:H, reaching $\rho$ ≈ 2.6–3.5 × 10−4$Ømega$cm, while ZnO:H showed a lower improvement of 13{%}. The averaged optical transmittance in the visible region is about 89{%} for the investigated TCOs. Such results match the properties of state-of-art ITO ($\rho$ ≈ 10−4$Ømega$cm and transmittance in VIS range of 90{%}) employing much more earth-abundant materials.

Araujo, Andreia, Manuel J. Mendes, Tiago Mateus, Antonio Vicente, Daniela Nunes, Tomas Calmeiro, Elvira Fortunato, Hugo Aguas, and Rodrigo Martins. "{Influence of the Substrate on the Morphology of Self-Assembled Silver Nanoparticles by Rapid Thermal Annealing}." Journal of Physical Chemistry C (2016). AbstractWebsite
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Lyubchyk, Andriy, António Vicente, Bertrand Soule, Pedro Urbano Alves, Tiago Mateus, Manuel J. Mendes, Hugo Águas, Elvira Fortunato, and Rodrigo Martins. "{Mapping the Electrical Properties of ZnO-Based Transparent Conductive Oxides Grown at Room Temperature and Improved by Controlled Postdeposition Annealing}." Advanced Electronic Materials. 2 (2016): 1500287. AbstractWebsite

Indium tin oxide (ITO) is the current standard state-of-the-art transparent conductive oxide (TCO), given its remarkable optical and electrical properties. However, the scarcity of indium carries an important drawback for the long-term application due to its intensive use in many optoelectronic devices such as displays, solar cells, and interactive systems. Zinc oxide-based TCOs can be a cost-effective and viable alternative, but the limitations imposed by their transmittance versus resistivity tradeoff still keep them behind ITO. In this work, an in-depth study of the structural and compositional material changes induced by specific postannealing treatments is presented, based on aluminum zinc oxide (AZO) and hydrogenated AZO (AZO:H) thin films grown by rf-magnetron sputtering at room temperature that allows an extensive understanding of the films' electrical/structural changes and the ability to tune their physical parameters to yield increasingly better performances, which put them in line with the best ITO quality standards. The present investigation comprises results of thermal annealing at atmospheric pressure, vacuum, forming gas, H2 and Ar atmospheres and plasmas. Overall the study being performed leads to a decrease in resistivity above 40{%}, reaching $\rho$ ≈ 3 × 10−4 $Ømega$ cm, with an average optical transmittance in the visible region around 88{%}. Such results are equivalent to the properties of state-of-the-art ITO.

2015
Lyubchyk, A., SA Filonovich, T. Mateus, MJ Mendes, A. Vicente, JP Leitão, BP Falcão, E. Fortunato, H. Águas, and R. Martins. "{Nanocrystalline thin film silicon solar cells: A deeper look into p/i interface formation}." Thin Solid Films (2015). AbstractWebsite
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Vicente, Antonio, Hugo Aguas, Tiago Mateus, Andreia Araujo, Andriy Lyubchyk, Simo Siitonen, Elvira Fortunato, and Rodrigo Martins. "{Solar cells for self-sustainable intelligent packaging}." Journal of Materials Chemistry A. 3 (2015): 13226-13236. AbstractWebsite

Nowadays there is a strong demand for intelligent packaging to provide comfort, welfare and security to owners, vendors and consumers by allowing them to know the contents and interact with the goods. This is of particular relevance for low cost, fully disposable and recyclable products, such as identification tags and medical diagnostic tests, and devices for analysis and/or quality control in food and pharmaceutical industries. However, the increase of complexity and processing capacity requires continuous power and can be addressed by the combined use of a small disposable battery, charged by a disposable solar cell, which is able to work under indoor lighting. Herein, we show a proof-of-concept of the pioneering production of thin-film amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) solar cells with an efficiency of 4{%} by plasma enhanced chemical vapour deposition (PECVD) on liquid packaging cardboard (LPC), which is commonly used in the food and beverage industries. Such accomplishment put us one step closer to this revolution by providing a flexible, renewable and extremely cheap autonomous energy packaging system. Moreover, such Si thin films take advantage of their good performance at low-light levels, which also makes them highly desirable for cheap mobile indoor applications.

Águas, Hugo, Tiago Mateus, António Vicente, Diana Gaspar, Manuel J. Mendes, Wolfgang A. Schmidt, LuÍs Pereira, Elvira Fortunato, and Rodrigo Martins. "{Thin Film Silicon Photovoltaic Cells on Paper for Flexible Indoor Applications}." Advanced Functional Materials. 25 (2015): 3592-3598. AbstractWebsite

The present development of non-wafer-based photovoltaics (PV) allows supporting thin film solar cells on a wide variety of low-cost recyclable and flexible substrates such as paper, thereby extending PV to a broad range of consumer-oriented disposable applications where autonomous energy harvesting is a bottleneck issue. However, their fibrous structure makes it challenging to fabricate good-performing inorganic PV devices on such substrates. The advances presented here demonstrate the viability of fabricating thin film silicon PV cells on paper coated with a hydrophilic mesoporous layer. Such layer can not only withstand the cells production temperature (150 °C), but also provide adequate paper sealing and surface finishing for the cell's layers deposition. The substances released from the paper substrate are continuously monitored during the cell deposition by mass spectrometry, which allows adapting the procedures to mitigate any contamination from the substrate. In this way, a proof-of-concept solar cell with 3.4{%} cell efficiency (41{%} fill factor, 0.82 V open-circuit voltage and 10.2 mA cm−2 short-circuit current density) is attained, opening the door to the use of paper as a reliable substrate to fabricate inorganic PV cells for a plethora of indoor applications with tremendous impact in multi-sectorial fields such as food, pharmacy and security.

2014
Gaspar, D., AC Pimentel, MJ Mendes, T. Mateus, BP Falcão, JP Leitão, J. Soares, A. Araújo, A. Vicente, SA Filonovich, H. Águas, R. Martins, and I. Ferreira. "{Ag and Sn Nanoparticles to Enhance the Near-Infrared Absorbance of a-Si:H Thin Films}." Plasmonics. 9 (2014): 1015-1023. AbstractWebsite
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