Describing transport in defected nanoparticle solids using a new, hierarchical, simulation tool, TRIDENS
Chase Hansen, Davis Unruh, Miguel Alba, Caroline Qian, Alex Abelson,, Matt Law, and Gergely T. Zimanyi

TL;DR
This paper introduces TRIDENS, a hierarchical simulation tool that models carrier transport in defected nanoparticle solids across atomic to macroscopic scales, aiding the design of more efficient NP solar cells.
Contribution
The paper develops TRIDENS, a novel multi-layer simulation framework that incorporates planar defects and percolation analysis to better understand transport in nanoparticle solids.
Findings
Percolation transition separates low and high mobility phases.
Efros-Shklovskii bimodal model effectively describes mobility crossover.
Simulation results inform strategies to improve NP solar cell efficiency.
Abstract
The efficiency of nanoparticle (NP) solar cells has grown impressively in recent years, exceeding 16%. However, the carrier mobility in NP solar cells, and in other optoelectronic applications remains low, thus critically limiting their performance. Therefore, carrier transport in NP solids needs to be better understood to further improve the overall efficiency of NP solar cell technology. However, it is technically challenging to simulate experimental scale samples, as physical processes from atomic to mesoscopic scales all crucially impact transport. To rise to this challenge, here we report the development of TRIDENS: the Transport in Defected Nanoparticle Solids Simulator, that adds three more hierarchical layers to our previously developed HINTS code for nanoparticle solar cells. In TRIDENS, we first introduced planar defects, such as twin planes and grain boundaries into…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsElectrostatics and Colloid Interactions
