Toward Ultra-Efficient Solar Energy Regulation in WS2 - MoSe2 Heterojunction Photocells
ORAL
Abstract
next-generation solar energy harvesting devices. In conventional photovoltaic systems energy
fluctuations present a hurdle to high storage efficiency, since – without regulation – too much
power may overload electrical networks. A recent theoretical model [1] has demonstrated that
when two nondegenerate light absorbing states are coupled to a single lower state internal
energy fluctuations are passively reduced. Here we show that heterostructures of monolayer
transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) present a unique experimental space to realize this
model. We synthesize TMD photocells via exfoliation and deterministic transfer of monolayer
WS2 and MoSe2. Using supercontinuum photoresponse spectroscopy we are able to access
individual absorbing states and probe the resulting interlayer photocurrent. We compare this dual-
channel photocell to photosynthetic reaction centers, which act in tandem through chlorophyll a
and b, to efficiently convert solar energy into usable power for energy storage. [1] Nano Letters
16, 7461 (2016).
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Presenters
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Jedediah Kistner-Morris
Univ of California - Riverside
Authors
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Jedediah Kistner-Morris
Univ of California - Riverside
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Fatemeh Barati
Physics & Astronomy, Univ of California - Riverside, Univ of California - Riverside
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Dennis Pleskot
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Univ of California - Riverside, Materials Science and Engineering, University of California Riverside, Univ of California - Riverside
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Jacky Wan
Univ of California - Riverside
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Nathaniel Gabor
Physics, Univ of California - Riverside, Physics & Astronomy, Univ of California - Riverside, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Univ of California - Riverside, Univ of California - Riverside, Physics and Astronomy, University of California Riverside, Physics, University of California Riverside