In TiO2-based dye-sensitized nanocrystalline solar cells, efficiencies of up to 11% have been obtained using
Ru dyes, but the limited availability of these dyes together with their undesirable environmental impact have
led to the search for cheaper and safer organic-based dyes. In this Letter, we report the synthesis, electronic,
and photovoltaic properties of novel green porphyrin sensitizers. All six porphyrin dyes give solar cell
efficiencies of ≥5%, but the best performing dye under standard global AM 1.5 solar conditions gives a short
circuit photocurrent density (j
sc) of 14.0 ± 0.20 mA/cm2, an open circuit voltage of 680 ± 30 mV, and a fill
factor of 0.74, corresponding to an overall conversion efficiency of 7.1%, which, for porphyrin-based sensitizers,
is unprecedented. This same dye gives an efficiency of 3.6% in a solid-state cell with spiro-MeOTAD as the
hole transporting component, comparable to solid-state cells incorporating the best performing ruthenium
dyes.
In the research field of magnonics, it is envisaged that spin waves will be used as information carriers, promoting operation based on their wave properties. However, the field still faces major challenges. To become fully competitive, novel schemes for energy-efficient control of spin-wave propagation in two dimensions have to be realized on much smaller length scales than used before. In this Letter, we address these challenges with the experimental realization of a novel approach to guide spin waves in reconfigurable, nano-sized magnonic waveguides. For this purpose, we make use of two inherent characteristics of magnetism: the non-volatility of magnetic remanence states and the nanometre dimensions of domain walls formed within these magnetic configurations. We present the experimental observation and micromagnetic simulations of spin-wave propagation inside nano-sized domain walls and realize a first step towards a reconfigurable domain-wall-based magnonic nanocircuitry.
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