1st Edition

Liquid Crystals in Photovoltaics An Introduction

By Dr. Luz J Martinez-Miranda Copyright 2020
    98 Pages 43 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    98 Pages 43 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    This book explores why the properties of liquid crystals make them ideal for use in photovoltaic applications. It achieves this by presenting a description of the properties of liquid crystals and how their electronic properties compare to that of polymers used in organic photovoltaics. It explores how the type of liquid crystal chosen can help in improving the efficiency of the photovoltaics. It compares experimental and theoretical ways in which the efficiency is directly or indirectly estimated between the organic photovoltaics and the organic photovoltaics that contain a liquid crystal. It first introduces liquid crystals and their different varieties, before reviewing their electronic transfer properties and how they can improve efficiency. It is an ideal text for graduate students and young researches considering entering the area of photovoltaics - specifically, organic photovoltaics – who do not yet have knowledge of this field.

    • Introduces the field of liquid crystals and provides basic information to those new to the field, in a concise and visual manner
    • Describes which characteristics of a liquid crystal are most advantageous to use in photovoltaics
    • Provides basic knowledge of photovoltaics for those who do not have previous knowledge of how they behave electronically

    Chapter 1 What are liquid crystals and how do we measure their order?

    Chapter 2 Energetic Properties of Liquid Crystals: Relation to the Order Parameters

    Chapter 3 Review of organic electronics

    Chapter 4 Liquid Crystals in Photovoltaics

    Biography

    Luz J. Martínez-Miranda is Associate Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Maryland, College Park, MD. She is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and the American Physical Society (APS), and winner of the 2013 Edward A. Bouchet Prize of the APS for her research in liquid crystals. She serves in the board of the International Liquid Crystal Society (ILCS). She served as president and board member of the National Society for Hispanic Physicists (NSHP) and was a board member for the Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science (SACNAS). She has been working with liquid crystals as a graduate student. O