Abstract:The color of polymer solar cells using an opaque electrode is given by the reflected light, which depends on the composition and thickness of each layer of the device. Metal oxide based optical spacers were intensively studied in polymer solar cells aiming to optimize the light absorption. However, the low conductivity of materials such as ZnO and TiO 2 limits the -----
Degradation of Organic Photovoltaic (OPV) devices is currently a topic under intense research as it is one of the main limitations towards the commercialization of this technology. Morphological changes at both active layer and interfaces with the outer contacts are believed to determine main key issues to be overcome. In-line techniques are essential to rule out any effect arising during sample fabrication.Unfortunately, the number of physical techniques able to provide morphological information on complete and operational devices is certainly limited. In this work, we study the thermal degradation of bulk heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells composed by different donor polymers with techniques developed to provide in-situ information on operational devices. Capacitance measurement as a function of temperature monitors the electrical integrity of the active layer and provides the threshold temperature (T MAX ) at which the whole device becomes thermally unstable. We found a direct correlation between the threshold temperature T MAX , obtained by capacitance-temperature measurements on complete OPV devices, and the power conversion efficiency decay measured at 85°C. Devices show to be thermal stable when the temperature of the thermal stress is below the T MAX , while above the T MAX evident changes in the active layer or at the active layer/electrode interface are also detected by confocal fluorescence microscopy. The capacitance method gives precious guidelines to predict the thermal stability of BHJ solar cells using accelerated and easy tests.
The electrical properties of diketopyrrolopyrrole ethyl‐hexylated (DPP(TBFu)2) thin film sandwich structure of the ITO/DPP(TBFu)2/Al configuration for different annealing temperatures ranging from 40 to 130°C is investigated. The current–voltage characteristics showed an excellent rectifying behaviour of the device, and from which the diode parameters were extracted. It is found that all parameters remain constant upon annealing temperatures, with the exception of the turn‐on voltage. An increase of the turn‐on voltage from an initial value of 1.6–2.08 V is noticed starting from 70 to 100°C, respectively. This fact is attributed to the effect of residual solvent induced defect states that may act as free carriers. Defect states density for the non‐annealed and annealed device at 130°C derived from capacitance–voltage measurements is found to correlate well with the turn‐on voltage. It is found that annealing the device at 130°C results in a smaller concentration of defect states. In addition, it is also found that the annealing process produces the flat band voltage drop, which has a direct impact on the turn‐on voltage.
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