This symposium aims to act as a forum for the rapidly expanding and multidisciplinary community of scientists engaged in modelling perovskite solar cells. Research challenges to be addressed include the influence of materials and morphology, triple cation perovskites, 0D to 3D perovskites, the development of lead-free and all organic materials, carrier selective contact layers, phase changes, ion migration, hysteresis, thermal and moisture instability, mechanical flexibility. Modelling at any length scale is within scope. Contributions should have a significant modelling element but can also include experimental validation. Early career researchers are especially encouraged.
- Microscopic electronic structure models of perovskite materials
- Molecular dynamics simulations
- Charge transport at the mesoscale
- Device models
- Tandem devices and modules
- Interfaces
- Organo-metal halides including mixed halides
- All inorganic perovskites
- Lead free perovskites
- Hysteresis and degradation
Alison Walker's research is on multiscale modelling of materials and devices, focussing on organic and perovskite opto-electronic and electronic devices. She took her undergraduate and postgraduate degrees at the University of Oxford, followed by postdocs at Michigan State University in the US and at Daresbury Laboratory in the UK. Then she took up a lectureship at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK, moving to the University of Bath in 1998, holding a Royal Society Industry Fellowship with Cambridge Display Technology 2003-2006. She directs the Centre for Doctoral Training in New and Sustainable Photovoltaics involving 7 UK universities. She has coordinated four EU projects, including the Horizon 2020 Innovative Training Network, Maestro,MAking pErovskiteS TRuly explOitable, and was a partner in the Horizon2020 project EoCoE -II, Energy Oriented Centre of Excellence for Energy, towards exascale for energy. In 2019 she chaired the Solar Commission aimed at publicising the role of solar in the UK economy - see her website https://people.bath.ac.uk/pysabw/. She was a member of the physics assessment sub panel for assessing UK research in 2021.
Juan A. Anta is Full Professor of Physical Chemistry at the University Pablo de Olavide, Seville, Spain. He obtained a BA in Chemistry in the Universidad Complutense of Madrid (Spain) and carried out his PhD research at the Physical Chemistry Institut of the National Research Council of Spain. His research focuses on fundamental studies of energy photoconversion processes, especially on dye and perovskite solar cells, using numerical simulation and modelling tools, as well as advanced optoelectronic characterization techniques such as impedance spectroscopy and other small perturbation techniques.
Alessio Gagliardi
Claudine Katan (born Hoerner) received her Ph.D. in physics (nonlinear optics) from the University of Strasbourg (ULP), France in 1992. She subsequently served as a lecturer in physics at the University of Rennes (UR1), France, before being appointed as a CNRS Research Investigator in the Physics Department at Rennes in 1993. Until 2003, her research interests concerned the properties of molecular charge-transfer crystals and the topology of electron densities mainly through approaches based on density functional theory (e.g. the CP-PAW code by P. E. Blöchl, IBM-Zurich). She then joined the Chemistry Department at Rennes and turned her research interests toward the structural, electronic and linear/nonlinear optical properties of molecular and supramolecular chromophores using various theoretical approaches—from modeling to state-of-the-art electronic structure calculations (e.g. CEO methodology by S. Tretiak, LANL) . Since the end of 2010, her research has also been devoted to 3D and 2D crystalline materials of the family of halide perovskites based on solid-state physics concepts. Overall, her theoretical work is closely related to the experimental research developed in-house and through international collaboratorations.
Amanda Neukirch
Prof. Dr. Beat Ruhstaller is founder of Fluxim and lecturer at the Zurich University of Applied Sciences ZHAW in Winterthur, Switzerland. After a Diploma in Physics from ETH Zürich he obtained his PhD in Physics at the University of California, Santa Cruz (USA), in 2000. He was a postdoc at the IBM Zurich Research Laboratory in the display technology group before joining ZHAW, where he headed the Institute of Computational Physics from 2007 to 2010. In 2006 he founded Fluxim which he has managed as CEO since 2011. Fluxim has successfully brought R&D tool innovations from the lab to the OLED and solar cell market. He has been performing research on both optical, electronic and thermal processes in light-emitting and light-harvesting (organic) semiconductor devices.