O

Oleksandr Voznyy

University of Toronto

ORCID: 0000-0002-8656-5074

Publishes on Quantum Dots Synthesis And Properties, Perovskite Materials and Applications, Chalcogenide Semiconductor Thin Films. 289 papers and 48k citations.

289Publications
48kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Homogeneously dispersed multimetal oxygen-evolving catalysts
Bo Zhang, X. R. Zheng, Oleksandr Voznyy et al.|Science|2016
Cited by 2.4kOpen Access

Earth-abundant first-row (3d) transition metal-based catalysts have been developed for the oxygen-evolution reaction (OER); however, they operate at overpotentials substantially above thermodynamic requirements. Density functional theory suggested that non-3d high-valency metals such as tungsten can modulate 3d metal oxides, providing near-optimal adsorption energies for OER intermediates. We developed a room-temperature synthesis to produce gelled oxyhydroxides materials with an atomically homogeneous metal distribution. These gelled FeCoW oxyhydroxides exhibit the lowest overpotential (191 millivolts) reported at 10 milliamperes per square centimeter in alkaline electrolyte. The catalyst shows no evidence of degradation after more than 500 hours of operation. X-ray absorption and computational studies reveal a synergistic interplay between tungsten, iron, and cobalt in producing a favorable local coordination environment and electronic structure that enhance the energetics for OER.

Efficient and stable solution-processed planar perovskite solar cells via contact passivation
Hairen Tan, Ankit Jain, Oleksandr Voznyy et al.|Science|2017
Cited by 2.3kOpen Access

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).