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Department of Chemistry and Bioscience

PhD Defence by Jing Gao

High Efficiency All-Small-Molecule Organic Solar Cells

Frederik Bajers Vej 7H, 9220, Aalborg Ø, Room 3.122-8

25.09.2025 09:15 - 11:30

  • English

  • On location

Frederik Bajers Vej 7H, 9220, Aalborg Ø, Room 3.122-8

25.09.2025 09:15 - 11:30

English

On location

Department of Chemistry and Bioscience

PhD Defence by Jing Gao

High Efficiency All-Small-Molecule Organic Solar Cells

Frederik Bajers Vej 7H, 9220, Aalborg Ø, Room 3.122-8

25.09.2025 09:15 - 11:30

  • English

  • On location

Frederik Bajers Vej 7H, 9220, Aalborg Ø, Room 3.122-8

25.09.2025 09:15 - 11:30

English

On location

Abstract

This PhD project investigates two independent strategies for suppressing dark current in organic photodetectors, aiming to enhance their overall detectivity.

From a material design perspective, bulky polymer donors with sterically hindered side chains were synthesized to introduce efficient hole-trapping effects, resulting in a significant reduction in dark current.

From a device architecture standpoint, a gradient bulk heterojunction (BHJ) structure was developed, enabling further suppression of leakage current compared to conventional BHJ devices.

Based on these approaches, high-performance organic photodetectors were successfully fabricated, including short-wave infrared (SWIR) devices with spectral response beyond 1200 nm and semitransparent photomultiplication-type photodetectors.

These results demonstrate effective pathways for advancing low-noise, flexible optoelectronic devices for future imaging and sensing applications.

Attendees

in the defence
Assessment Committee
  • Associate Professor Mads Koustrup Jørgensen (chair), Aalborg University
  • Associate Professor Vida Engmann, University of Southern Denmark
  • Reader Zhe Li, Queen Marry University of London
PhD Supervisors
  • Associate Professor Donghong Yu