Spontaneous formation of hexagonal surface relief patterns (see Figure) occurs upon uniform, coherent laser irradiation of a poly‐(methylmethacrylate) with 35 % of the methyl ester groups replaced by an azo dye. The structures grow at a rate linearly dependent on the light intensity, above a threshold value. Using linearly polarized light, the elongation axis of the structures orients along the polarization direction.
The permanent all-optical poling of an azo-aromatic acrylic copolymer is experimentally demonstrated by seeding preparation in a backward phase-conjugation geometry. The microscopic mechanism involves an orientational hole burning followed by orientational redistribution caused by trans-to-cis isomerization of the azo-dye chromophores. The characteristic kinetics of monitored by second-harmonic generation.
Submicrometric periodic patterning of an organic solar cell surface is investigated in order to optimize the photovoltaic conversion efficiency of the device. Patterning is achieved using a single-step all-optical technique based on photoinduced mass transport in azopolymer films. The polymer film with a structured surface is used as a substrate for an organic solar cell based on a copper phthalocyanine/C60 heterojunction. The effect of periodic patterning is investigated through the solar-cell optical-absorption properties and external quantum efficiency measurements. The possibility to increase the short circuit current density and the corresponding photovoltaic conversion efficiency is evidenced with one-dimensional periodic structures.
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