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Creators/Authors contains: "Fafarman, Aaron T"

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  1. In this work, the phenomenon of strain induced by a mismatch in thermal expansion coefficients between a thin film and its substrate is harnessed in a new context, replacing the canonical planar support with a three-dimensional (3-D), nanoconfining scaffold in which we embed a material of interest. In this manner, we demonstrate a general approach to exert a continuously tunable, triaxial, tensile strain, defying the Poisson ratio of the embedded material and achieving the exotic condition of “negative pressure.” This approach is hypothetically generalizable to materials of low modulus and high thermal expansion coefficient, and we use it here to achieve negative pressure in perovskite-phase CsPbI3embedded within the cylindrical pores of anodic aluminum oxide membranes. Through controlled thermal hysteresis, the perovskite crystal structure can be continuously tuned toward higher symmetry when confined in a scaffold with pore size <40 nm, in contrast with the symmetry-reducing action of any other mechanical perturbation. We use this effect to control the octahedral rotation angle that is critical to the remarkable photovoltaic attributes of halide perovskites. Under hundreds of megapascals of apparent negative pressure, the bandgap tunability is observed to follow the same quantitative trend observed for hydrostatic positive pressure, exploring the negative pressure region and demonstrating the relative dominance of bond stretching effects over average octahedral rotation angle on electronic structure. This study reveals and quantifies the structural and electronic consequences of 3D tensile strain present by design and provides a framework for understanding adventitious strain present in all nanocomposite materials. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 12, 2025
  2. The microstructure of solid coatings produced by solution processing is highly dependent on the coupling between growth, solute diffusion, and solvent evaporation. Here, a quasi-2D numerical model coupling drying and solidification is used to predict the transient lateral growth of two adjacent nuclei growing toward each other. Lateral gradients of the solute and solvent influence the evolution of film thickness and solid growth rate. The important process parameters and solvent properties are captured by the dimensionless Peclet number (Pe) and the Biot number (Bi), modified by an aspect ratio defined by the film thickness and distance between nuclei. By variation of Pe and Bi, the evaporation dynamics and aspect ratio are shown to largely determine the coating quality. These findings are applied to drying thin films of crystallizing halide perovskites, demonstrating a convenient process map for capturing the relationship between the modified Bi and well defined coating regimes, which may be generalized for any solution processed thin film coating systems. 
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  3. This paper presents estimations for life cycle energy demand, human toxicity, and climate change of industrial-scale production of A-site cation precursor chemicals that may be used in production of perovskite solar cells. We employed process scale-up concepts, updated data sources and industry-relevant process modelling assumptions to build commercially relevant life cycle inventories (LCIs) for each of the perovskite precursors. Life cycle assessment (LCA) was applied to characterize and compare the resulting life cycle impacts and comparisons were made with other module components. The main finding of this work is that precursor impacts are similar to each other and about 1,000 times less than solar glass. Therefore, selection of perovskite compositions for commercialization should be driven solely by efficiency and stability rather than environmental concerns. 
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  4. null (Ed.)