Optimize opto-electronic devices with new compact measuring system

The LumY Pro is an easy-to-use, non-invasive and versatile system with unparalleled compactness to swiftly quantify absolute electro- and photoluminescence photon fluxes of thin film absorbers, layer stacks or complete devices under various operating conditions.

The LumY Pro is an easy-to-use, non-invasive and versatile system with unparalleled compactness to swiftly quantify absolute electro- and photoluminescence photon fluxes of thin film absorbers, layer stacks or complete devices under various operating conditions.

In order to develop efficient opto-electronic devices such as solar cells or LEDs, it is crucial to improve the quality of the semiconductors. To achieve this, it is necessary to determine the luminescence yield of the semiconductor material. For this characterization, a research team at HZB has developed a new measuring device that precisely determines the luminescence and is also very compact. In order to evaluate the potential for commercial applications, the team now receives a Field Study Fellowship from the Helmholtz Association.

A research team from HZB has already built a working prototype of the instrument, which will now be developed into a commercial product. The aim is to make the "LumY Pro" measuring system, which was developed and optimised for their own research, available to a wide range of users - in the spirit of technology and knowledge transfer. The researchers are focusing on users from research and industry who are working on the further development of opto-electronic devices such as solar cells and LEDs.

The "LumY Pro" measuring device is smaller than a shoe box (20x22x12 cm) and can also be used in the protective atmosphere of a glove box. It measures the quantity of photons or electrons being injected into a sample and the quantity of photons emitted by the excitation (absolute photon or electroluminescence). This enables researchers to draw conclusions about the charge carrier density in the absorber and to look in detail at where losses occur in the device or layer.

Measuring the quality of film absorbers, layer stacks and complete devices

Single layers, but also layer stacks and complete devices can be examined with flexibly adjustable light intensities and electrical voltages. The detailed analysis is integrated in a specially developed measuring and evaluation software. The software and the prototype of the system have already been successfully tested on various semiconductors in cooperation with the Helmholtz Innovation Lab HySPRINT.

Applicable for many semiconductor materials - evaluation software is included

LumY Pro can be used for the quality characterization of organic-inorganic perovskites, but also of other semiconductor materials such as kesterites or gallium arsenide. The development team hopes to accelerate the research and development of such opto-electronic devices and reduce the consumption of resources. The potential is great, because more than 400 research groups worldwide are working on solar cells made of perovskites alone.

"A precise measuring system that combines all these characterization possibilities is currently lacking on the market. We now want to implement this in a compact, versatile and yet easy to use product," says Dr. Lukas Kegelmann from the project team. The field study will now show how large the market potential is and which applications and functionalities are particularly interesting for users from research and industry.  

LumY Pro was developed by scientists of the HZB groups around Dr. Thomas Unold, Dr. Eva Unger and Prof. Dr. Steve Albrecht.

(sz)

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • Susanne Nies appointed to EU advisory group on Green Deal
    News
    12.11.2025
    Susanne Nies appointed to EU advisory group on Green Deal
    Dr. Susanne Nies heads the Green Deal Ukraina project at HZB, which aims to support the development of a sustainable energy system in Ukraine. The energy expert has now also been appointed to the European Commission's scientific advisory group to comment on regulatory burdens in connection with the net-zero target (DG GROW).

  • The future of corals – what X-rays can tell us
    Interview
    12.11.2025
    The future of corals – what X-rays can tell us
    This summer, it was all over the media. Driven by the climate crisis, the oceans have now also passed a critical point, the absorption of CO2 is making the oceans increasingly acidic. The shells of certain sea snails are already showing the first signs of damage. But also the skeleton structures of coral reefs are deteriorating in more acidic conditions. This is especially concerning given that corals are already suffering from marine heatwaves and pollution, which are leading to bleaching and finally to the death of entire reefs worldwide. But how exactly does ocean acidification affect reef structures?

    Prof. Dr. Tali Mass, a marine biologist from the University of Haifa, Israel, is an expert on stony corals. Together with Prof. Dr. Paul Zaslansky, X-ray imaging expert from Charité Berlin, she investigated at BESSY II the skeleton formation in baby corals, raised under different pH conditions. Antonia Rötger spoke online with the two experts about the results of their recent study and the future of coral reefs.

  • Long-term stability for perovskite solar cells: a big step forward
    Science Highlight
    07.11.2025
    Long-term stability for perovskite solar cells: a big step forward
    Perovskite solar cells are inexpensive to produce and generate a high amount of electric power per surface area. However, they are not yet stable enough, losing efficiency more rapidly than the silicon market standard. Now, an international team led by Prof. Dr. Antonio Abate has dramatically increased their stability by applying a novel coating to the interface between the surface of the perovskite and the top contact layer. This has even boosted efficiency to almost 27%, which represents the state-of-the-art. After 1,200 hours of continuous operation under standard illumination, no decrease in efficiency was observed. The study involved research teams from China, Italy, Switzerland and Germany and has been published in Nature Photonics.