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Meng-Che Tsai

Bio: Meng-Che Tsai is an academic researcher from National Taiwan University of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Electrocatalyst. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 47 publications receiving 2107 citations. Previous affiliations of Meng-Che Tsai include Industrial Technology Research Institute.

Papers published on a yearly basis

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the causes of failure and associated mechanisms of device degradation, approaches to improve stability, and methods and protocols are discussed in detail and form the main focus of the review article.
Abstract: Organometal halide perovskite solar cells have evolved in an exponential manner in the two key areas of efficiency and stability. The power conversion efficiency (PCE) reached 20.1% late last year. The key disquiet was stability, which has been limiting practical application, but now the state of the art is promising, being measured in thousands of hours. These improvements have been achieved through the application of different materials, interfaces and device architecture optimizations, especially after the investigation of hole conductor free mesoporous devices incorporating carbon electrodes, which promise stable, low cost and easy device fabrication methods. However, this work is still far from complete. There are various issues associated with the degradation of Omh-perovskite, and the interface and device instability which must be addressed to achieve good reproducibility and long lifetimes for Omh-PSCs with high conversion efficiencies. A comprehensive understanding of these issues is required to achieve breakthroughs in stability and practical outdoor applications of Omh-PSCs. For successful small and large scale applications, besides the improvement of the PCE, the stability of Omh-PSCs has to be improved. The causes of failure and associated mechanisms of device degradation, followed by the origins of degradation, approaches to improve stability, and methods and protocols are discussed in detail and form the main focus of this review article.

1,403 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a review of strong metal-support interactions (SMSI) is presented, which are responsible for the catalytic activity, selectivity and stability of various reaction systems, such as heterogeneous catalysis and electrocatalysis.
Abstract: Interactions between metals and supports are of fundamental interest in heterogeneous catalysis. The electronic, geometric and bifunctional effects originating from Strong Metal-Support Interactions (SMSI) that are responsible for the catalyst's activity, selectivity, and stability are key factors that determine performance. Research into SMSI is fast-growing with many revolutionary systems being developed to enhance our understanding of its nature and effects. This review starts with a brief overview of heterogeneous catalysis and SMSI; then three major mechanisms involving electronic, geometric and bifunctional effects are summarized to introduce the fundamental concepts, recent progress and disagreement remained. Subsequently, advanced analytical techniques are introduced as contemporary approaches to the investigation and understanding of SMSI. In addition, the effects of SMSI on the catalytic activity, selectivity and stability of various reaction systems, such as heterogeneous catalysis and electrocatalysis are examined. Additionally, a brief review of various protocols used for the manipulation of interactions between metals and supports is given. Lastly, the future of SMSI with respect to further developments and ongoing challenging issues is addressed.

221 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
31 Jan 2020-ACS Nano
TL;DR: The concept of the hierarchical 3D architecture of Ag NW@NiMn-LDHs considerably advances the practice of LDHs towards metal-air batteries and oxygen electrocatalyst.
Abstract: Herein, we report hierarchical 3D NiMn-layered double hydroxide (NiMn-LDHs) shells grown on conductive silver nanowire (Ag NWs) cores as efficient, low-cost, and durable oxygen reduction reaction (ORR)/oxygen evolution reaction (OER) bifunctional electrocatalysts for metal-air batteries. The hierarchical 3D architectured Ag NW@NiMn-LDH catalysts exhibit superb OER/ORR activities in alkaline conditions. The outstanding bifunctional activities of Ag NW@NiMn-LDHs are essentially attributed to increasing both site activity and site populations. The synergistic contributions from the hierarchical 3D open-pore structure of the LDH shells, improved electrical conductivity, and small thickness of the LDHs shells are associated with more accessible site populations. Moreover, the charge transfer between Ag cores and metals of LDH shells and the formation of defective and distorted sites (less coordinated Ni and Mn sites) strongly enhance the site activity. Thus, Ag NW@NiMn-LDH hybrids exhibit a 0.75 V overvoltage difference between ORR and OER with excellent durability for 30 h, demonstrating the distinguished bifunctional electrocatalyst reported to date. Interestingly, the homemade rechargeable Zn-air battery using the hybrid Ag NW@NiMn-LDHs (1:2) catalyst as the air electrode exhibits a charge-discharge voltage gap of ∼0.77 V at 10 mA cm-2 and shows excellent cycling stability. Thus, the concept of the hierarchical 3D architecture of Ag NW@NiMn-LDHs considerably advances the practice of LDHs toward metal-air batteries and oxygen electrocatalysts.

126 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A Cu current collector formed with ultrathin multilayer graphene grown via chemical vapor deposition (CVD) was used as an artificial layer to stabilize the electrode interface and sandwich-deposited Li with Cu to alleviate the big hurdle (initial capacity loss) in anode-free batteries.
Abstract: The will to circumvent capacity fading, Li dendrite formation, and low coulombic efficiency in anode-free Li-metal batteries (AFLMBs) requires a radical change in the science underpinning new materials discovery, battery design, and understanding electrode interfaces. Herein, a Cu current collector formed with ultrathin multilayer graphene grown via chemical vapor deposition (CVD) was used as an artificial layer to stabilize the electrode interface and sandwich-deposited Li with Cu. A multilayer graphene film's superior strength, chemical stability, and flexibility make it an excellent choice to modify a Cu electrode. Fabricating an anode bigger than the cathode improved the alignment of the electrodes during assembly, minimizing interfacial stress. Here, 19 mm electrodes when paired with a commercial LiFePO4 cathode (mass loading: ∼12 mg cm−2) delivered the first-cycle discharge capacities of 147 and 151 mA h g−1 for bare and multilayer-graphene-protected electrodes, respectively, which could alleviate the big hurdle (initial capacity loss) in anode-free batteries. After 100 round-trip cycles, bare Cu and multilayer-graphene-protected electrodes retained ∼46 and ∼61% of their initial capacities, respectively, in an ether-based electrolyte at the rate of 0.1 C.

100 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a nickel-ruthenium layered double hydroxide (NiRu-LDHs) nanosheets were subjected to decoration with conductive silver nanoparticles, which interestingly induce their multivacancies associated with catalytic site activity and populations, and showed excellent catalytic activity toward both oxygen reduction and evolution reaction (ORR/OER) features with low onset overpotentials of 0.21 V and −0.27 V, respectively.
Abstract: Developing efficient and durable bifunctional electrocatalysts for oxygen reduction and evolution reaction (ORR/OER) is highly desirable in energy conversion and storage systems. This study prepares nickel–ruthenium layered double hydroxide (NiRu-LDHs) nanosheets subjected to decoration with conductive silver nanoparticles (Ag NP/NiRu-LDHs), which interestingly induce their multivacancies associated with catalytic site activity and populations. The as-prepared Ag NP/NiRu-LDH shows excellent catalytic activity toward both OER and ORR features with low onset overpotentials of 0.21 V and −0.27 V, respectively, with a 0.76 V potential gap between OER potential at 10 mA cm–2 and ORR potential at −3 mA cm–2, demonstrating that it is the preeminent bifunctional electrocatalyst reported to date. Compared with pristine NiRu-LDHs, the resulting Ag NP/NiRu-LDHs nanosheets require only an overpotential of 0.31 V to deliver 10 mA cm–2 with excellent durability. The superb bifunctional performance of Ag NP/NiRu-LDH is ...

97 citations


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A broad and historical view of different aspects and their complex interplay in CO2R catalysis on Cu is taken, with the purpose of providing new insights, critical evaluations, and guidance to the field with regard to research directions and best practices.
Abstract: To date, copper is the only heterogeneous catalyst that has shown a propensity to produce valuable hydrocarbons and alcohols, such as ethylene and ethanol, from electrochemical CO2 reduction (CO2R). There are variety of factors that impact CO2R activity and selectivity, including the catalyst surface structure, morphology, composition, the choice of electrolyte ions and pH, and the electrochemical cell design. Many of these factors are often intertwined, which can complicate catalyst discovery and design efforts. Here we take a broad and historical view of these different aspects and their complex interplay in CO2R catalysis on Cu, with the purpose of providing new insights, critical evaluations, and guidance to the field with regard to research directions and best practices. First, we describe the various experimental probes and complementary theoretical methods that have been used to discern the mechanisms by which products are formed, and next we present our current understanding of the complex reaction networks for CO2R on Cu. We then analyze two key methods that have been used in attempts to alter the activity and selectivity of Cu: nanostructuring and the formation of bimetallic electrodes. Finally, we offer some perspectives on the future outlook for electrochemical CO2R.

2,055 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
17 Feb 2017-Science
TL;DR: A contact-passivation strategy using chlorine-capped TiO2 colloidal nanocrystal film that mitigates interfacial recombination and improves interface binding in low-temperature planar solar cells is reported.
Abstract: Planar perovskite solar cells (PSCs) made entirely via solution processing at low temperatures (<150°C) offer promise for simple manufacturing, compatibility with flexible substrates, and perovskite-based tandem devices. However, these PSCs require an electron-selective layer that performs well with similar processing. We report a contact-passivation strategy using chlorine-capped TiO2 colloidal nanocrystal film that mitigates interfacial recombination and improves interface binding in low-temperature planar solar cells. We fabricated solar cells with certified efficiencies of 20.1 and 19.5% for active areas of 0.049 and 1.1 square centimeters, respectively, achieved via low-temperature solution processing. Solar cells with efficiency greater than 20% retained 90% (97% after dark recovery) of their initial performance after 500 hours of continuous room-temperature operation at their maximum power point under 1-sun illumination (where 1 sun is defined as the standard illumination at AM1.5, or 1 kilowatt/square meter).

1,912 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: One-year stable perovskite devices are shown by engineering an ultra-stable 2D/3D (HOOC(CH2)4NH3)2PbI4/CH3NH3Pb mezzanine junction, which will enable the timely commercialization of perovSKite solar cells.
Abstract: Despite the impressive photovoltaic performances with power conversion efficiency beyond 22%, perovskite solar cells are poorly stable under operation, failing by far the market requirements. Various technological approaches have been proposed to overcome the instability problem, which, while delivering appreciable incremental improvements, are still far from a market-proof solution. Here we show one-year stable perovskite devices by engineering an ultra-stable 2D/3D (HOOC(CH2)4NH3)2PbI4/CH3NH3PbI3 perovskite junction. The 2D/3D forms an exceptional gradually-organized multi-dimensional interface that yields up to 12.9% efficiency in a carbon-based architecture, and 14.6% in standard mesoporous solar cells. To demonstrate the up-scale potential of our technology, we fabricate 10 × 10 cm2 solar modules by a fully printable industrial-scale process, delivering 11.2% efficiency stable for >10,000 h with zero loss in performances measured under controlled standard conditions. This innovative stable and low-cost architecture will enable the timely commercialization of perovskite solar cells. Up-scaling represents a key challenge for photovoltaics based on metal halide perovskites. Using a composite of 2D and 3D perovskites in combination with a printable carbon black/graphite counter electrode; Granciniet al., report 11.2% efficient modules stable over 10,000 hours.

1,531 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Park et al. as discussed by the authors proposed a reproducible manufacturing method for perovskite solar cells, as well as routes to manage grain boundaries and interfacial charge transport to achieve long-term stability.
Abstract: Solar cells employing a halide perovskite with an organic cation now show power conversion efficiency of up to 22%. However, these cells are facing issues towards commercialization, such as the need to achieve long-term stability and the development of a manufacturing method for the reproducible fabrication of high-performance devices. Here, we propose a strategy to obtain stable and commercially viable perovskite solar cells. A reproducible manufacturing method is suggested, as well as routes to manage grain boundaries and interfacial charge transport. Electroluminescence is regarded as a metric to gauge theoretical efficiency. We highlight how optimizing the design of device architectures is important not only for achieving high efficiency but also for hysteresis-free and stable performance. We argue that reliable device characterization is needed to ensure the advance of this technology towards practical applications. We believe that perovskite-based devices can be competitive with silicon solar modules, and discuss issues related to the safe management of toxic material. Perovskite solar cells have emerged as a potential low-cost alternative to existing technologies. In this Perspective, Park et al. explore a strategy for the commercialisation of perovskite solar cells.

920 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
20 May 2016-ACS Nano
TL;DR: It is found that exposing PSCs to a temperature of 70 °C is enough to induce gold migration through the hole-transporting layer (HTL), spiro-MeOTAD, and into the perovskite material, which in turn severely affects the device performance metrics under working conditions.
Abstract: Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) have now achieved efficiencies in excess of 22%, but very little is known about their long-term stability under thermal stress. So far, stability reports have hinted at the importance of substituting the organic components, but little attention has been given to the metal contact. We investigated the stability of state-of-the-art PSCs with efficiencies exceeding 20%. Remarkably, we found that exposing PSCs to a temperature of 70 °C is enough to induce gold migration through the hole-transporting layer (HTL), spiro-MeOTAD, and into the perovskite material, which in turn severely affects the device performance metrics under working conditions. Importantly, we found that the main cause of irreversible degradation is not due to decomposition of the organic and hybrid perovskite layers. By introducing a Cr metal interlayer between the HTL and gold electrode, high-temperature-induced irreversible long-term losses are avoided. This key finding is essential in the quest for achieving...

914 citations