M13 bacteriophage-templated gold nanowires as stretchable electrodes in perovskite solar cells

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Abstract

The synthesis and stretchable device application of bacteriophage-templated gold nanowires are demonstrated. Stretchable gold nanowires are synthesised by growing gold nanoparticles on a network of virus clones. Exploiting dimethylamine borane as a reducing agent, a spontaneous redox reaction between HAuCl4 and M13 bacteriophage wild-type virus - without the need for genetic engineering - produces a metal nanowire network with high transparency and conductivity. Virus, HAuCl4, and ascorbic acid additive concentrations are optimised for high optical conductivity. The optimal virus-templated gold nanowire electrodes from aqueous solutions exhibit a sheet resistance of 144.5 Ω sq-1 and transparency of 83% at 550 nm light wavelength. The virus-templated gold nanowire electrodes are transferred to polydimethylsiloxane for morphology roughness reduction as well as the application of its stretchability. Perovskite solar cells fabricated using virus-templated Au nanowires exhibit a power conversion efficiency of 9.28% and a stretchability of 8% owing to the intrinsic flexibility of the M13 bacteriophage template. This journal is

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Han, J., Nam, J. S., Kim, K., Choi, E. J., Lee, J. M., Maruyama, S., … Oh, J. W. (2021). M13 bacteriophage-templated gold nanowires as stretchable electrodes in perovskite solar cells. Materials Advances, 2(1), 488–496. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0ma00935k

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