Critical Interfaces in Organic Solar Cells and Their Influence on the Open-Circuit Voltage

被引:252
|
作者
Potscavage, William J., Jr. [1 ]
Sharma, Asha [1 ]
Kippelen, Bernard [1 ]
机构
[1] Georgia Inst Technol, Sch Elect & Comp Engn, COPE, Atlanta, GA 30332 USA
关键词
PHOTOVOLTAIC CELLS; PERFORMANCE; POLYMERS; ORIGIN;
D O I
10.1021/ar900139v
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Organic photovoltaics, which convert sunlight into electricity with thin films of organic semiconductors, have been the subject of active research over the past 20 years. The global energy challenge has greatly increased interest in this technology in recent years. Low-temperature processing of organic small molecules from the vapor phase or of polymers from solution can confer organic semiconductors with a critical advantage over inorganic photovoltaic materials since the high-temperature processing requirements of the latter limit the range of substrates on which they can be deposited. Unfortunately, despite significant advances, the power conversion efficiency of organic solar cells remains low, with maximum values in the range of 6%. A better understanding of the physical processes that determine the efficiency of organic photovoltaic cells is crucial to enhancing their competitiveness with other thin-film technologies. Maximum values for the photocurrent can be estimated from the light-harvesting capability of the individual molecules or polymers in the device. However, a better understanding of the materials-level processes, particularly those in layer-to-layer interfaces, that determine the open-circuit voltage (V-OC) in organic solar cells is critical and remains the subject of active research. The conventional wisdom is to use organic semiconductors with smaller band gaps to harvest a larger portion of the solar spectrum. This method is not always an effective prescription for increasing efficiency: it ignores the fact that the value of V-OC is generally decreased in devices employing materials with smaller band gaps, as is the case with inorganic semiconductors. In this Account, we discuss the influence of the different interfaces formed in organic multilayer photovoltaic devices on the value of V-OC; we use pentacene-C-60 solar cells as a model. In particular, we use top and bottom electrodes,with different work function values, finding that V-OC is-nearly invariant. In contrast, studies on devices incorporating hole-transport layers with different ionization potentials confirm that the value of V-OC depends largely on the relative energy levels of the donor and acceptor species that form the essential heterojunction. An analysis of the properties of solar cells using equivalent-circuit methods reveals that V-OC is proportional to the logarithm of the ratio of the photocurrent density J(ph) divided by the reverse saturation current density J(0). Hence, an understanding of the physical origin of J(0) directly yields information on what limits V-OC. We assign the physical origin of J(0) to the thermal excitation of carriers from the donor to the acceptor materials that form the organic heterojunction. Finally, we show that the solution to achieving higher power conversion efficiency in organic solar cells will be to control simultaneously the energetics and the electronic coupling between the donor and acceptor materials, in both the ground and excited state.
引用
收藏
页码:1758 / 1767
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Open-circuit voltage in organic solar cells
    Qi, Boyuan
    Wang, Jizheng
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY, 2012, 22 (46) : 24315 - 24325
  • [2] Origin of the open-circuit voltage in organic solar cells
    Xue, Jiangeng
    Rand, Barry P.
    Forrest, Stephen R.
    [J]. ORGANIC PHOTOVOLTAICS VII, 2006, 6334
  • [3] Derivation of the open-circuit voltage of organic solar cells
    Staple, Douglas B.
    Oliver, Patricia A. K.
    Hill, Ian G.
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW B, 2014, 89 (20):
  • [4] Influence of the donor/acceptor interface on the open-circuit voltage in organic solar cells
    Liu, Z. T.
    Lo, M. F.
    Wang, H. B.
    Ng, T. W.
    Roy, V. A. L.
    Lee, C. S.
    Lee, S. T.
    [J]. APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 2009, 95 (09)
  • [5] Doping for Controlling Open-Circuit Voltage in Organic Solar Cells
    Shintaku, Naoto
    Hiramoto, Masahiro
    Izawa, Seiichiro
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C, 2018, 122 (10): : 5248 - 5253
  • [6] Open-Circuit Voltage and Effective Gap of Organic Solar Cells
    Widmer, Johannes
    Tietze, Max
    Leo, Karl
    Riede, Moritz
    [J]. ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, 2013, 23 (46) : 5814 - 5821
  • [7] Tunable open-circuit voltage in ternary organic solar cells
    Li, Hui
    Zhang, Zhi-Guo
    Li, YongFang
    Wang, Jizheng
    [J]. APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 2012, 101 (16)
  • [8] Microcrystalline silicon solar cells with passivated interfaces for high open-circuit voltage
    Haenni, Simon
    Boccard, Mathieu
    Bugnon, Gregory
    Despeisse, Matthieu
    Schuettauf, Jan-Willem
    Haug, Franz-Josef
    Meillaud, Fanny
    Ballif, Christophe
    [J]. PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI A-APPLICATIONS AND MATERIALS SCIENCE, 2015, 212 (04): : 840 - 845
  • [9] Origin of the open-circuit voltage in multilayer heterojunction organic solar cells
    Potscavage, W. J.
    Yoo, S.
    Kippelen, B.
    [J]. APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 2008, 93 (19)
  • [10] Impact of mesoscale order on open-circuit voltage in organic solar cells
    Poelking C.
    Tietze M.
    Elschner C.
    Olthof S.
    Hertel D.
    Baumeier B.
    Würthner F.
    Meerholz K.
    Leo K.
    Andrienko D.
    [J]. Nature Materials, 2015, 14 (4) : 434 - 439