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Nanostructured and photoelectrochemical systems for solar photon conversion / / editors, Mary D. Archer, Arthur J. Nozik



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Titolo: Nanostructured and photoelectrochemical systems for solar photon conversion / / editors, Mary D. Archer, Arthur J. Nozik Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: London, : Imperial College Press
Singapore ; ; Hackensack, NJ, : World Scientific Pub. Co., c2008
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (780 p.)
Disciplina: 621.47
Soggetto topico: Photoelectrochemistry
Nanostructured materials
Solar energy
Photocatalysis
Altri autori: ArcherMary D  
NozikArthur J. <1936->  
Note generali: Description based upon print version of record.
Nota di bibliografia: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Nota di contenuto: CONTENTS; About the authors; Preface; Overview M. D. Archer; 1.1 Themes; 1.2 Historical perspective; 1.3 Extremely thin absorber (ETA) cells; 1.4 Organic solar cells; 1.5 Dye-sensitised solar cells (Grätzel cells); 1.6 Regenerative solar cells; 1.7 Future prospects; App. The vacuum scale of electrode potential and the concept of the 1A solution Fermi level; 1A.1 SHE and SCE scales of electrode potential; 1A.2 Absolute electrode potentials; 1A.3 Absolute electrode potential of the SHE; 1A.4 The solution Fermi level; 1A.5 Vacuum scale of electrode potential; References
2 Fundamentals in photoelectrochemistry R. J. D. Miller and R. Memming2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Photophysics of semiconductors and semiconductor particles; 2.2.1 Field effects; 2.3 Carrier relaxation; 2.3.1 Bulk three-dimensional semiconductors; 2.3.2 Layered semiconductors: quasi-two-dimensional systems; 2.3.3 Quasi-one-dimensional semiconductors; 2.3.4 Nanoscale-structured semiconductors; 2.3.5 Midgap state effects: surface-state trapping; 2.4 Charge transfer at the semiconductor-electrolyte interface; 2.4.1 Energy levels at the semiconductor-liquid interface; 2.4.2 Majority-carrier processes
2.4.3 Minority-carrier processes2.4.4 The quasi-Fermi level concept for electron-transfer processes; 2.4.5 Interfacial charge-transfer dynamics; 2.4.6 Dye sensitisation; 2.5 Conversion of solar energy; 2.5.1 Electrochemical photovoltaic cells; 2.5.2 Photoelectrolysis of water; 2.5.3 Conversion efficiencies; 2.5.4 Competition between redox reactions and anodic decomposition; 2.6 Photocatalysis; 2.7 Summary; Editorial note; References; 3 Fundamentals and applications of quantum-confined structures A. J. Nozik; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Quantisation effects in semiconductor nanostructures
3.2.1 Synthesis of semiconductor nanostructures3.2.2 Energy levels in quantum wells, superlattices and quantum dots; 3.3 Optical spectroscopy of quantum wells, superlattices and quantum dots; 3.3.1 Quantum wells and superlattices; 3.3.2 Quantum dots; 3.4 Hot electron and hole cooling dynamics in quantum-confined semiconductors; 3.4.1 Quantum wells and superlattices; 3.4.2 Quantum dots; 3.5 High conversion efficiency via multiple exciton generation in quantum dots; 3.5.1 Cooling dynamics in quantum dots; 3.5.2 Electron-hole pair (exciton) multiplication in quantum dots
3.5.3 Theory of multiple exciton generation3.5.4 Thermodynamic calculations of conversion efficiency in MEG QD solar cells; 3.6 Quantum dot solar cell configurations; 3.6.1 Photoelectrodes composed of quantum dot arrays; 3.6.2 Quantum dot-sensitised nanocrystalline TiO2 solar cells; 3.6.3 Quantum dots dispersed in organic semiconductor polymer matrices; 3.7 Summary and conclusions; Acknowledgements; References; 4 Fundamentals and applications in electron-transfer reactions M. D. Archer; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Historical perspective; 4.3 Thermodynamics of ET and PET reactions
4.4 Classical Marcus theory
Sommario/riassunto: In this book, expert authors describe advanced solar photon conversion approaches that promise highly efficient photovoltaic and photoelectrochemical cells with sophisticated architectures on the one hand, and plastic photovoltaic coatings that are inexpensive enough to be disposable on the other. Their leitmotifs include light-induced exciton generation, junction architectures that lead to efficient exciton dissociation, and charge collection by percolation through mesoscale phases. Photocatalysis is closely related to photoelectrochemistry, and the fundamentals of both disciplines are covere
Titolo autorizzato: Nanostructured and photoelectrochemical systems for solar photon conversion  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 9781601197733
160119773X
9781848161542
1848161549
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9911006616903321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Serie: Series on photoconversion of solar energy ; ; v. 3.