Amphithéâtre Maurice Halbwachs, Site Marcelin Berthelot
Open to all
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Moderated by : Jean François Guillemoles, CNRS-IPVF

Presentations

  • Introduction - State of the art and prospects: Martin Green, UNSW, Australia
  • Photonics and photovoltaics: Stéphane Collin, CNRS-C2N
  • Custom-built materials: Nathanaelle Schneider, CNRS-IPVF
  • Silicon-perovskite tandems: Solenn Berson, CEA-INES
  • Photovoltaics, a science of interfaces: Philip Schulz, CNRS-IPVF, MOPGA

Nathanaëlle Schneider

Nathanaëlle Schneider

Nathanaëlle Schneider is a CNRS research fellow at theInstitut Photovoltaïque d'Île-de-France (IPVF) laboratory, working on the synthesis of new materials by ALD (Atomic Layer Deposition) for photovoltaic applications. Using coordination chemistry in particular, her research has led to new methodological approaches for the design of ALD precursors, material solutions for certain photovoltaic devices and new functional materials for which UMR-IPVF is a recognized world pioneer. In 2020, he was awarded the CNRS bronze medal.

Solenn Berson

Solenn Berson (F), PhD graduated from CPE Lyon, France (Lyon school of Chemistry, Physics and Electronics) with a master degree in Polymer Materials and Composites in 2004. She got her PhD degree in organic photovoltaic field at the Laboratory of Molecular, Organic and Hybrid Electronics, CEA Grenoble, France. After an industrial postdoctoral fellow, she joined the Organic Photovoltaic group, CEA, INES in 2008 as a postdoctoral researcher and since 2010 as a project manager for architectures and processes of organic/hybrid photovoltaic devices. She is now in charge of the developments of silicon/perovskite tandem photovoltaic cells.

Philip Schulz

Philip Schulz is a CNRS Research Director at the Institut Photovoltaïque d'Île-de-France (IPVF), where he serves as deputy head of the Characterization department and leads the Interfaces and Hybrid Materials group through a Young lnvestigator grant in the "Make Our Planet Great Again" initiative. Before entering CNRS in 2017, Philip Schulz worked on interface design for organic and hybrid electronics as a postdoctoral researcher in the USA at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) from 2014 to 2017 and Princeton University from 2012 to 2014. He holds a PhD in physics from RWTH Aachen University in Germany (2012).

Speaker(s)

Solenn Berson

CEA-INES

Stéphane Collin

CNRS-C2N

Martin Green

UNSW, Australia

Nathanaelle Schneider

CNRS-IPVF

Philip Schulz

CNRS-IPVF, MOPGA