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29 Nov 09:09

High-Performance Ultrathin Flexible Solid-State Supercapacitors Based on Solution Processable Mo1.33C MXene and PEDOT:PSS

by Leiqiang Qin, Quanzheng Tao, Ahmed El Ghazaly, Julia Fernandez-Rodriguez, Per O. Å. Persson, Johanna Rosen, Fengling Zhang

Abstract

MXenes, a young family of 2D transition metal carbides/nitrides, show great potential in electrochemical energy storage applications. Herein, a high performance ultrathin flexible solid-state supercapacitor is demonstrated based on a Mo1.33C MXene with vacancy ordering in an aligned layer structure MXene/poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonic acid) (PEDOT:PSS) composite film posttreated with concentrated H2SO4. The flexible solid-state supercapacitor delivers a maximum capacitance of 568 F cm−3, an ultrahigh energy density of 33.2 mWh cm−3 and a power density of 19 470 mW cm−3. The Mo1.33C MXene/PEDOT:PSS composite film shows a reduction in resistance upon H2SO4 treatment, a higher capacitance (1310 F cm−3) and improved rate capabilities than both pristine Mo1.33C MXene and the nontreated Mo1.33C/PEDOT:PSS composite films. The enhanced capacitance and stability are attributed to the synergistic effect of increased interlayer spacing between Mo1.33C MXene layers due to insertion of conductive PEDOT, and surface redox processes of the PEDOT and the MXene.

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A MXene-based solution processable flexible solid-state supercapacitor with high performance is developed from a MXene/poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonic acid) (PEDOT:PSS) composite film. After posttreatment with concentrated H2SO4, the PEDOT nanofiber network is aligned between the MXene sheets, leading to highly improved flexibility and, most importantly, improved capacitances (1310 F cm−3), rate-capabilities, and stability.

29 Nov 09:05

A novel hole extraction layer to enhance the performance of inverted organic solar cells

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2017, 5,25385-25390
DOI: 10.1039/C7TA08694F, Paper
Dashan Qin, Huan Cao, Cenqi Yan, Shuai-Shuai Meng, Jian-Xin Tang, Xiaowei Zhan
The MoO3/PEIE/Ag anode markedly improves the power conversion efficiency of inverted organic solar cells relative to the MoO3/Ag anode.
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29 Nov 09:04

Ultrafast Long-Range Charge Separation in Nonfullerene Organic Solar Cells

by Yasunari Tamai, Yeli Fan, Vincent O. Kim, Kostiantyn Ziabrev, Akshay Rao, Stephen Barlow, Seth R. Marder, Richard H. Friend and S. Matthew Menke

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ACS Nano
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b06575
20 Nov 14:44

Semi-transparent plastic solar cell based on oxide-metal-oxide multilayer electrodes

by Dong Chan Lim, Jae Hoon Jeong, Kihyon Hong, Sungho Nho, Joo-Yul Lee, Quoc Viet Hoang, Sang Kyu Lee, Kyunglim Pyo, Dongil Lee, Shinuk Cho

Abstract

Semi-transparent plastic solar cells are currently highly attractive for their potential as the most prominent components for building-integrated photovoltaics. However, the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of semi-transparent plastic solar cells still lags behind due to the lack of a suitable transparent top electrode which can be easily fabricated. Here, we demonstrate high performance semi-transparent plastic solar cells by introducing an oxide-metal-oxide (OMO) multilayer composed of MoO3 and Ag as a transparent top electrode. Because the conductivity of the OMO electrode is governed by an intermediate Ag layer sandwiched between 2 MoO3 layers, the PCE also strongly depends on the thickness of the intermediate Ag layer in the OMO electrode. By controlling the thickness of Ag layer, we obtained various PCE values from 4.5% with ~50% maximum transparency in the visible region to 9.1% with ~5% maximum transparency in the visible region. In addition, in order to get closer to practical application, 2 sizes of mini-module devices were fabricated on a larger (10.0 cm × 10.0 cm) substrate for outdoor operation and small-sized (7.0 cm × 5.0 cm) substrates for indoor operation were demonstrated using 3 materials of different color.

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High efficient semi-transparent plastic solar cells based on oxide-metal-oxide were demonstrated from a single unit cell device to 10.0 cm × 10.0 cm sized mini-module devices. The semi-transparent solar cell which has a maximum transparency of 25% in visible region yielded a power conversion efficiency of 8.4%.

14 Nov 11:22

Angular-Shaped Dithienonaphthalene-Based Nonfullerene Acceptor for High-Performance Polymer Solar Cells with Large Open-Circuit Voltages and Minimal Energy Losses

by Yunlong Ma, Meiqi Zhang, Yabing Tang, Wei Ma and Qingdong Zheng

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Chemistry of Materials
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemmater.7b03770
14 Nov 09:38

Small-Molecule Organic Photovoltaic Modules Fabricated via Halogen-Free Solvent System with Roll-to-Roll Compatible Scalable Printing Method

by Youn-Jung Heo, Yen-Sook Jung, Kyeongil Hwang, Jueng-Eun Kim, Jun-Seok Yeo, Sehyun Lee, Ye-Jin Jeon, Donmin Lee and Dong-Yu Kim

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ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b12420
13 Nov 16:12

Charge Generation and Recombination in an Organic Solar Cell with Low Energetic Offsets

by Niva A. Ran, John A. Love, Michael C. Heiber, Xuechen Jiao, Michael P. Hughes, Akchheta Karki, Ming Wang, Viktor V. Brus, Hengbin Wang, Dieter Neher, Harald Ade, Guillermo C. Bazan, Thuc-Quyen Nguyen

Abstract

Organic bulk heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells require energetic offsets between the donor and acceptor to obtain high short-circuit currents (JSC) and fill factors (FF). However, it is necessary to reduce the energetic offsets to achieve high open-circuit voltages (VOC). Recently, reports have highlighted BHJ blends that are pushing at the accepted limits of energetic offsets necessary for high efficiency. Unfortunately, most of these BHJs have modest FF values. How the energetic offset impacts the solar cell characteristics thus remains poorly understood. Here, a comprehensive characterization of the losses in a polymer:fullerene BHJ blend, PIPCP:phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PC61BM), that achieves a high VOC (0.9 V) with very low energy losses (Eloss = 0.52 eV) from the energy of absorbed photons, a respectable JSC (13 mA cm−2), but a limited FF (54%) is reported. Despite the low energetic offset, the system does not suffer from field-dependent generation and instead it is characterized by very fast nongeminate recombination and the presence of shallow traps. The charge-carrier losses are attributed to suboptimal morphology due to high miscibility between PIPCP and PC61BM. These results hold promise that given the appropriate morphology, the JSC, VOC, and FF can all be improved, even with very low energetic offsets.

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To realize organic photovoltaics with high open-circuit voltages and short-circuit currents, it is necessary to minimize energetic offsets between donor and acceptor semiconductors. This article describes a comprehensive study on charge recombination and generation in a system with very low energetic offsets yet relatively high performance, in order to identify the root cause for the limited fill factor.

13 Nov 15:35

A flexible solar cell/supercapacitor integrated energy device

Publication date: December 2017
Source:Nano Energy, Volume 42
Author(s): Pei Dong, Marco-Tulio F. Rodrigues, Jing Zhang, Raquel S. Borges, Kaushik Kalaga, Arava L.M. Reddy, Glaura G. Silva, Pulickel M. Ajayan, Jun Lou
Both flexible energy harvesting and storage devices have been widely reported separately to satisfy part of the needs in the emerging areas, including wearable electronics, and low-density applications such as rooftop solar collectors. However, a flexible energy system with mechanical robustness and light-weight is the integrated device that will serve the real demand. Herein, a flexible printable dye-sensitized solar cell/supercapacitor integrated energy device has been designed, fabricated and characterized. This new device has several advantages: flexible, portable, high voltage capacity (up to 1.8V), lightweight, environmental friendly and expanded indoor-use capabilities. The device demonstrated very stable performances under various extreme mechanical loading conditions in outdoor testing. This work paves way for future development of highly flexible integrated energy system for many potential applications.

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09 Oct 07:53

A universal approach to improve electron mobility without significantly enlarging phase separation size in IDT-based non-fullerene acceptor for organic solar cells

Publication date: Available online 6 October 2017
Source:Nano Energy
Author(s): Lin Zhang, Baojun Lin, Zhifan Ke, Jianya Chen, Wanbin Li, Maojie Zhang, Wei Ma
An in-situ solvent annealing method of solvent annealing during spin-coating (SC-SVA) was deployed to increase the electron mobility by improving the crystallinity of non-fullerene acceptor without significantly enlarging the domain size. Although similar effect can be achieved by the post solvent annealing and co-solvents methods, these methods meanwhile enlarge the phase separation in the PTB7-Th:ITIC based organic solar cells. Thus, the efficiency of SC-SVA based device results in a 20% enhancement and exhibits a better photovoltaic performance than that of the post solvent annealing and co-solvents methods. The fundamental mechanism of these three methods were analyzed and discussed in detail. As the enhanced crystallinity of non-fullerene acceptor could improve charge carrier mobility, the thick-film devices with SC-SVA were fabricated and exhibit great photovoltaic performance. Moreover, this beneficial SC-SVA method was successfully employed in the other IDT-based PTB7-Th:ITIC-Th and PTB7-Th:IEIC devices as well as in the PTZ1:IDIC binary and PTZ1:IDIC:ITIC ternary devices. The high efficiencies of 10.11% and 10.30% were achieved for the binary and ternary devices with SC-SVA, respectively, showing its excellent universality and prospect.

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06 Oct 07:57

Influence of Donor Polymer on the Molecular Ordering of Small Molecular Acceptors in Nonfullerene Polymer Solar Cells

by Huawei Hu, Kui Jiang, Philip C. Y. Chow, Long Ye, Guangye Zhang, Zhengke Li, Joshua H. Carpenter, Harald Ade, He Yan

Abstract

Nonfullerene polymer solar cells (PSCs) based on polymer donors and nonfullerene small molecular acceptors (SMAs) have recently attracted considerable attention. Although much of the progress is driven by the development of novel SMAs, the donor polymer also plays an important role in achieving efficient nonfullerene PSCs. However, it is far from clear how the polymer donor choice influences the morphology and performance of the SMAs and the nonfullerene blends. In addition, it is challenging to carry out quantitative analysis of the morphology of polymer:SMA blends, due to the low material contrast and overlapping scattering features of the π–π stacking between the two organic components. Here, a series of nonfullerene blends is studied based on ITIC-Th blended with five different donor polymers. Through quantitative morphology analysis, the (010) coherence length of the SMA is characterized and a positive correlation between the coherence length of the SMA and the device fill factor (FF) is established. The study reveals that the donor polymer can significantly change the molecular ordering of the SMA and thus improve the electron mobility and domain purity of the blend, which has an overall positive effect that leads to the enhanced device FF for nonfullerene PSCs.

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Morphological analysis reveals influence of the donor polymer on the structural/electronic properties of small molecular acceptor and the overall blend morphology. A direct correlation is found between the (010) coherence length of small molecular acceptor with device fill-factor and photocurrent density, which is in good agreement with the parameters reported for state-of-art high-efficiency nonfullerene polymer solar cells.

06 Oct 07:52

Efficient Semitransparent Organic Solar Cells with Tunable Color enabled by an Ultralow-Bandgap Nonfullerene Acceptor

by Yong Cui, Chenyi Yang, Huifeng Yao, Jie Zhu, Yuming Wang, Guoxiao Jia, Feng Gao, Jianhui Hou

Abstract

Semitransparent organic solar cells (OSCs) show attractive potential in power-generating windows. However, the development of semitransparent OSCs is lagging behind opaque OSCs. Here, an ultralow-bandgap nonfullerene acceptor, “IEICO-4Cl”, is designed and synthesized, whose absorption spectrum is mainly located in the near-infrared region. When IEICO-4Cl is blended with different polymer donors (J52, PBDB-T, and PTB7-Th), the colors of the blend films can be tuned from purple to blue to cyan, respectively. Traditional OSCs with a nontransparent Al electrode fabricated by J52:IEICO-4Cl, PBDB-T:IEICO-4Cl, and PTB7-Th:IEICO-4Cl yield power conversion efficiencies (PCE) of 9.65 ± 0.33%, 9.43 ± 0.13%, and 10.0 ± 0.2%, respectively. By using 15 nm Au as the electrode, semitransparent OSCs based on these three blends also show PCEs of 6.37%, 6.24%, and 6.97% with high average visible transmittance (AVT) of 35.1%, 35.7%, and 33.5%, respectively. Furthermore, via changing the thickness of Au in the OSCs, the relationship between the transmittance and efficiency is studied in detail, and an impressive PCE of 8.38% with an AVT of 25.7% is obtained, which is an outstanding value in the semitransparent OSCs.

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A new nonfullerene acceptor, IEICO-4Cl, is designed to prepare semitransparent organic solar cells (OSCs), yielding a power conversion efficiency of 8.38% with an average visible transmittance of 25.7%, which is among the top results for semitransparent OSCs.

06 Oct 07:51

Unraveling the Solution-State Supramolecular Structures of Donor–Acceptor Polymers and their Influence on Solid-State Morphology and Charge-Transport Properties

by Yu-Qing Zheng, Ze-Fan Yao, Ting Lei, Jin-Hu Dou, Chi-Yuan Yang, Lin Zou, Xiangyi Meng, Wei Ma, Jie-Yu Wang, Jian Pei

Abstract

Polymer self-assembly in solution prior to film fabrication makes solution-state structures critical for their solid-state packing and optoelectronic properties. However, unraveling the solution-state supramolecular structures is challenging, not to mention establishing a clear relationship between the solution-state structure and the charge-transport properties in field-effect transistors. Here, for the first time, it is revealed that the thin-film morphology of a conjugated polymer inherits the features of its solution-state supramolecular structures. A “solution-state supramolecular structure control” strategy is proposed to increase the electron mobility of a benzodifurandione-based oligo(p-phenylene vinylene) (BDOPV)-based polymer. It is shown that the solution-state structures of the BDOPV-based conjugated polymer can be tuned such that it forms a 1D rod-like structure in good solvent and a 2D lamellar structure in poor solvent. By tuning the solution-state structure, films with high crystallinity and good interdomain connectivity are obtained. The electron mobility significantly increases from the original value of 1.8 to 3.2 cm2 V−1 s−1. This work demonstrates that “solution-state supramolecular structure” control is critical for understanding and optimization of the thin-film morphology and charge-transport properties of conjugated polymers.

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A supramolecular self-assembly strategy is used to control the solution-state structure of a conjugated polymer. It is revealed that the thin-film morphology of the conjugated polymer inherits the features of their solution-state supramolecular structures. Through “solution-state supramolecular structure control”, the electron mobility of the polymer is boosted to 3.2 cm2 V−1 s−1, nearly doubling the original performance.

18 Aug 01:57

Amorphous Ternary Charge-Cascade Molecules for Bulk Heterojunction Photovoltaics

by Xavier A. Jeanbourquin, Aiman Rahmanudin, Xiaoyun Yu, Melissa Johnson, Néstor Guijarro, Liang Yao and Kevin Sivula

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ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b04983
18 Aug 01:42

Molecular Engineering of Simple Benzene–Arylamine Hole-Transporting Materials for Perovskite Solar Cells

by Xuepeng Liu, Fantai Kong, Shengli Jin, Wangchao Chen, Ting Yu, Tasawar Hayat, Ahmed Alsaedi, Hongxia Wang, Zhan’ao Tan, Jian Chen and Songyuan Dai

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ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b06193
18 Aug 01:41

Short-Term Environmental Effects and Their Influence on Spatial Homogeneity of Organic Solar Cell Functionality

by Huei-Ting Chien, Peter W. Zach and Bettina Friedel

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ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b08365
16 Aug 00:47

Perovskite Solar Cells: Metal-Nanowire-Electrode-Based Perovskite Solar Cells: Challenging Issues and New Opportunities (Adv. Energy Mater. 15/2017)

by Jihoon Ahn, Hyewon Hwang, Sunho Jeong, Jooho Moon
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In article number 1602751, Sunho Jeong, Jooho Moon, and co-workers highlight recent progress on metal nanowire-electrode-integrated perovskite solar cells (PSCs). The reliance on vacuum-deposited electrode can be alleviated and the high-throughput production is easily achievable, owing to the suitability of both perovskite and metal nanowire electrodes toward solution-based processes. Also, semi-transparent and/or flexible PSCs is obtainable, since metal nanowire electrodes can be versatilely deposited regardless of the cell configurations.

16 Aug 00:46

Interfaces in Perovskite Solar Cells

by Azhar Fakharuddin, Lukas Schmidt-Mende, Germà Garcia-Belmonte, Rajan Jose, Ivan Mora-Sero

Abstract

Rapid improvement in photoconversion efficiency (PCE) of solution processable organometallic hybrid halide based perovskite solar cells (PSCs) have taken the photovoltaic (PV) community with a surprise and has extended their application in other electronic devices such as light emitting diodes, photo detectors and batteries. Together with efforts to push the PCE of PSCs to record values >22% – now at par with that of crystalline silicon solar cells – origin of their PV action and underlying physical processes are also deeply investigated worldwide in diverse device configurations. A typical PSC consists of a perovskite film sandwiched between an electron and a hole selective contact thereby creating ESC/perovskite and perovskite/HSC interfaces, respectively. The selective contacts and their interfaces determine properties of perovskite layer and also control the performance, origin of PV action, open circuit voltage, device stability, and hysteresis in PSCs. Herein, we define ideal charge selective contacts, and provide an overview on how the choice of interfacing materials impacts charge accumulation, transport, transfer/recombination, band-alignment, and electrical stability in PSCs. We then discuss device related considerations such as morphology of the selective contacts (planar or mesoporous), energetics and electrical properties (insulating and conducting), and its chemical properties (organic vs inorganic). Finally, the outlook highlights key challenges and future directions for a commercially viable perovskite based PV technology.

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The past few years marked a new era of organometallic halide hybrid perovskite efficient solar cell technology. To capitalize the potential of this new class of materials in solar cells, in particular, and in any electronic devices in general, an understanding of interfacial physical processes is crucial. Herein, a comprehensive analysis of the role of interfaces in determining the PV performance and long term operational stability of this PV technology is provided.

09 Aug 01:04

Role of Ionic Functional Groups on Ion Transport at Perovskite Interfaces

by Yao Liu, Lawrence A. Renna, Hilary B. Thompson, Zachariah A. Page, Todd Emrick, Michael D. Barnes, Monojit Bag, D. Venkataraman, Thomas P. Russell

Abstract

Hybrid organic/inorganic perovskite solar cells are invigorating the photovoltaic community due to their remarkable properties and efficiency. However, many perovskite solar cells show an undesirable current–voltage (IV) hysteresis in their forward and reverse voltage scans, working to the detriment of device characterization and performance. This hysteresis likely arises from slow ion migration in the bulk perovskite active layer to interfaces which may induce charge trapping. It is shown that interfacial chemistry between the perovskite and charge transport layer plays a critical role in ion transport and IV hysteresis in perovskite-based devices. Specifically, phenylene vinylene polymers containing cationic, zwitterionic, or anionic pendent groups are utilized to fabricate charge transport layers with specific interfacial ionic functionalities. The interfacial-adsorbing boundary induced by the zwitterionic polymer in contact with the perovskite increases the local ion concentration, which is responsible for the observed IV hysteresis. Moreover, the ion adsorbing properties of this interface are exploited for perovskite-based memristors. This fundamental study of IV hysteresis in perovskite-based devices introduces a new mechanism for inducing memristor behavior by interfacial ion adsorption.

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Ion migration at perovskite interfaces is investigated by varying the interface with cationic, anionic, and zwitterionic functionalities. The zwitterionic polymer interlayer generates an adsorbing boundary at the interface, increasing the local ion concentration, causing current–voltage (IV) hysteresis in perovskite-based devices. This fundamental study of perovskite IV hysteresis introduces a new mechanism for device memristor behavior by interfacial ion adsorption.

09 Aug 01:04

Efficient and Hysteresis-Free Perovskite Solar Cells Based on a Solution Processable Polar Fullerene Electron Transport Layer

by Ying-Chiao Wang, Xiaodong Li, Liping Zhu, Xiaohui Liu, Wenjun Zhang, Junfeng Fang

Abstract

Fullerene derivatives, which possess extraordinary geometric shapes and high electron affinity, have attracted significant attention for thin film technologies. This study demonstrates an important photovoltaic application using carboxyl-functionalized carbon buckyballs, C60 pyrrolidine tris-acid (CPTA), to fabricate electron transport layers (ETLs) that replace traditional metal oxide-based ETLs in efficient and stable n-i-p-structured planar perovskite solar cells (PSCs). The uniform CPTA film is covalently anchored onto the surface of indium tin oxide (ITO), significantly suppressing hysteresis and enhancing the flexural strength in the CPTA-modified PSCs. Moreover, solution-processable CPTA-based ETLs also enable the fabrication of lightweight flexible PSCs. The maximum-performing device structures composed of ITO/CPTA/CH3NH3PbI3/2,2′,7,7′-tetrakis-(N,N-di-p-methoxyphenylamine)-9,9′-spirobifluorene (spiro-OMeTAD)/Au yield power conversion efficiencies of more than 18% on glass substrates and up to 17% on flexible substrates. These results indicate that the CPTA layers provide new opportunities for solution-processed organic ETLs by substantially simplifying the procedure for fabricating PSCs for portable applications.

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A low-temperature and solution-processed polar C60 pyrrolidine tris-acid (CPTA) electron transport layer (ETL) with conformal morphology, deposited on an indium tin oxide surface through an esterification step, is used to produce hysteresis-free, bendable, and durable perovskite solar cells. Our results suggest that CPTA is a promising candidate to replace metal oxides and shed light on employing these easily fabricated ETLs in other portable photovoltaic technologies.

09 Aug 01:02

Rationally Designed Donor–Acceptor Random Copolymers with Optimized Complementary Light Absorption for Highly Efficient All-Polymer Solar Cells

by Sang Woo Kim, Joonhyeong Choi, Thi Thu Trang Bui, Changyeon Lee, Changsoon Cho, Kwangmin Na, Jihye Jung, Chang Eun Song, Biwu Ma, Jung-Yong Lee, Won Suk Shin, Bumjoon J. Kim

Most of the high-performance all-polymer solar cells (all-PSCs) reported to date are based on polymer donor and polymer acceptor pairs with largely overlapped light absorption properties, which seriously limits the efficiency of all-PSCs. This study reports the development of a series of random copolymer donors possessing complementary light absorption with the naphthalenediimide-based polymer acceptor P(NDI2HD-T2) for highly efficient all-PSCs. By controlling the molar ratio of the electron-rich benzodithiophene (BDTT) and electron-deficient fluorinated-thienothiophene (TT-F) units, a series of polymer donors with BDTT:TT-F ratios of 1:1 (P1), 3:1 (P2), 5:1 (P3), and 7:1 (P4) are prepared. The synthetic control of polymer composition allows for precise tuning of the light absorption properties of these new polymer donors, enabling optimization of light absorption properties to complement those of the P(NDI2HD-T2) acceptor. Copolymer P1 is found to be the optimal polymer donor for the fullerene-based solar cells due to its high light absorption, whereas the highest power conversion efficiency of 6.81% is achieved for the all-PSCs with P3, which has the most complementary light absorption with P(NDI2HD-T2).

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A series of poly(benzodithiophene-r-fluorinated-thienothiophene) [P(BDTT-r-TT-F)] random copolymers with tunable light absorption characteristics are developed by controlling the ratios of electron-rich BDTT and electron-deficient TT-F units. All-polymer solar cells (all-PSCs) fabricated from these polymer donors and the P(NDI2HD-T2) acceptor achieve efficiencies of up to 6.8% by optimizing the complementary light absorption of the polymer donor and acceptor.

09 Aug 00:58

Insights into charge carrier dynamics in organo-metal halide perovskites: from neat films to solar cells

Chem. Soc. Rev., 2017, 46,5714-5729
DOI: 10.1039/C6CS00942E, Tutorial Review
Open Access Open Access
Creative Commons Licence&nbsp This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.
Jiajun Peng, Yani Chen, Kaibo Zheng, Tonu Pullerits, Ziqi Liang
Various transport measurements for perovskites are reviewed with profound insights into charge dynamics from neat films to solar cells.
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07 Aug 00:50

Solvent-assisted crystallization via a delayed-annealing approach for highly efficient hybrid mesoscopic/planar perovskite solar cells

Publication date: December 2017
Source:Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells, Volume 172
Author(s): Albertus Adrian Sutanto, Shiang Lan, Chih-Fu Cheng, Sandeep B. Mane, Hui-Ping Wu, Mario Leonardus, Meng-Yu Xie, Shih-Chieh Yeh, Chiao-Wei Tseng, Chin-Ti Chen, Eric Wei-Guang Diau, Chen-Hsiung Hung
The formation of a dense and uniform perovskite film with large grain is an important factor for getting excellent device performance. Here, we report an optimized solvent-assisted crystallization procedure followed by a delayed annealing for easy and reproducible fabrications of perovskite solar cells with a hybrid mesoscopic configuration. The working electrode contains a mesoporous TiO2 scaffold layer of 100nm deposited on FTO substrate with a thin TiO2 blocking layer. The devices in this study were assembled using all commercially available materials without any extensive modification. Formation of uniform and pin-hole free perovskite nanocrystals with film thickness 200nm on top of the scaffold layer was achieved via an optimized solvent-assisted crystallization method. A much smoother perovskite layer was achieved with a delayed annealing for a certain period. The best performing device was obtained at the annealing delayed for 60min, giving the power conversion efficiency 16.9% with an average value 15.4% obtained from 60 devices.

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07 Aug 00:49

Source materials grain size effect on electrode microstructure and its effect on conventional bulk hetero-junction photovoltaics

Publication date: December 2017
Source:Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells, Volume 172
Author(s): Arul Varman Kesavan, Praveen C. Ramamurthy
In this work, the effect of silver cathode on the polymer diode and organic photovoltaic device (OPV) performance was investigated. The electron collecting contacts in diode and OPV device have been deposited from both silver pellet and nanoparticles form. Diode was fabricated by sandwiching poly(3-hexylthiophane-2,5-diyl) between ITO and Ag electrodes. It is observed that diode fabricated using Ag nanoparticles showed significant current density improvement. The enhancement in diode performance was studied by C-V measurements. Further, OPV cells fabricated using Ag nanoparticles showed improvement in current density which results in improved power conversion efficiency (PCE). The observed performance enhancements in diode and OPV device have been correlated with electrode microstructure and its interface properties. The performance enhancement in diode and OPV cells is evaluated by various electrical parameters such carrier concentration (N), density of trap states, trap distribution width (ω) and current density. These data indicate that the electrode grain size matching with the semiconductor morphology across metal/semiconductor interface is more critical for better charge transfer. Matching the roughness of the interface across the junction by use of appropriate starting material particle/grain size can help in extracting the maximum performance of an organic device.

29 Jul 00:49

Copper(I) Thiocyanate (CuSCN) Hole-Transport Layers Processed from Aqueous Precursor Solutions and Their Application in Thin-Film Transistors and Highly Efficient Organic and Organometal Halide Perovskite Solar Cells

by Nilushi Wijeyasinghe, Anna Regoutz, Flurin Eisner, Tian Du, Leonidas Tsetseris, Yen-Hung Lin, Hendrik Faber, Pichaya Pattanasattayavong, Jinhua Li, Feng Yan, Martyn A. McLachlan, David J. Payne, Martin Heeney, Thomas D. Anthopoulos

This study reports the development of copper(I) thiocyanate (CuSCN) hole-transport layers (HTLs) processed from aqueous ammonia as a novel alternative to conventional n-alkyl sulfide solvents. Wide bandgap (3.4–3.9 eV) and ultrathin (3–5 nm) layers of CuSCN are formed when the aqueous CuSCN–ammine complex solution is spin-cast in air and annealed at 100 °C. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy confirms the high compositional purity of the formed CuSCN layers, while the high-resolution valence band spectra agree with first-principles calculations. Study of the hole-transport properties using field-effect transistor measurements reveals that the aqueous-processed CuSCN layers exhibit a fivefold higher hole mobility than films processed from diethyl sulfide solutions with the maximum values approaching 0.1 cm2 V−1 s−1. A further interesting characteristic is the low surface roughness of the resulting CuSCN layers, which in the case of solar cells helps to planarize the indium tin oxide anode. Organic bulk heterojunction and planar organometal halide perovskite solar cells based on aqueous-processed CuSCN HTLs yield power conversion efficiency of 10.7% and 17.5%, respectively. Importantly, aqueous-processed CuSCN-based cells consistently outperform devices based on poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) polystyrene sulfonate HTLs. This is the first report on CuSCN films and devices processed via an aqueous-based synthetic route that is compatible with high-throughput manufacturing and paves the way for further developments.

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Dissolution of copper thiocyanate (CuSCN) in aqueous ammonia enables processing of superior quality hole-transporting layers at low temperature in ambient air. Transistors based on these CuSCN layers exhibit mobilities close to 0.1 cm2 V−1 s−1, while solar cells incorporating CuSCN interlayers yield power conversion efficiencies of 10.7% and 17.5% for organic bulk heterojunction and organometal halide cells, respectively.

29 Jul 00:42

High efficiency organic solar cells based on amorphous electron-donating polymer and modified fullerene acceptor

Publication date: September 2017
Source:Nano Energy, Volume 39
Author(s): Biao Xiao, Minli Zhang, Jun Yan, Guoping Luo, Ke Gao, Jiyan Liu, Qingliang You, Hong-Bo Wang, Chao Gao, Baofeng Zhao, Xuebo Zhao, Hongbin Wu, Feng Liu
The current manuscript examines the structure and property relationship of amorphous conjugated polymer based bulk heterojunction solar cells. Solvent vapor annealing (SVA) is used to optimize the morphology. It is seen that the structure order of the blended thin film does not change but phase separation becomes prominent. The space charge limited current and admittance spectroscopy reveals that the charge transport ability of the SVA-treated device is significantly strengthened. Furthermore, both the current-voltage analysis and impedance spectroscopy illustrates that SVA can effectively promote the fill factor (FF) and short circuit current density (J sc ) due to the enhanced charge transport properties. However, the increased mobility after the SVA treatment causes non-geminate charge carrier recombination and reduces geminate recombinations. In particular, the reduction in open circuit voltage (V oc ) of the solvent vapor annealed devices is found to originate from the charge recombination induced by the quasi-Fermi level variation between the donor and acceptor materials.

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29 Jul 00:38

Improved performance for polymer solar cells using CTAB-modified MoO3 as an anode buffer layer

Publication date: November 2017
Source:Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells, Volume 171
Author(s): Yanping Li, Huangzhong Yu, Xinxin Huang, Zuping Wu, Haihong Xu
We report a method to prepare molybdenum oxide thin films using the stable cetrimonium bromide-modified MoO3 (CTAB-modified MoO3) precursor solution. The effect of thermal treatment on the optical, crystalline, morphologic properties and surface wettability is greatly obvious because of the pyrolytic decomposition of CTAB. The highly efficient and stable polymer solar cells (PSCs) have been also fabricated by adopting CTAB-modified MoO3 nanocomposite films as the novel and universal anode buffer layers (ABLs). The P3HT:ICBA based solar cells with CTAB-modified MoO3 at 200°C heat treatment exhibit an best power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 5.80% with long-term stability, and the PTB7:PC71BM based solar cells with CTAB-modified MoO3 at 200°C heat treatment show an best PCE of 8.34% with long-term stability, which are higher than that of the corresponding devices with PEDOT:PSS films. The improvement in device performance is mainly due to the agreeable electrical properties and enhanced charge extraction of the CTAB-modified MoO3 ABLs, and CTAB modification to the MoO3 surface can effectively passivate its surface traps, suppress the recombination loss of carriers. The surface of CTAB-modified MoO3 films is also more hydrophobic than that of the PEDOT:PSS. In a word, these indicate the CTAB-modified MoO3 films may be used as a novel and generally applicable hole transport layer for high-efficiency and ambient stable polymer solar cells.

29 Jul 00:37

Enhanced planar heterojunction perovskite solar cell performance and stability using PDDA polyelectrolyte capping agent

Publication date: December 2017
Source:Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells, Volume 172
Author(s): Zhenhua Lin, Jingjing Chang, Hai Zhu, Qing-Hua Xu, Chunfu Zhang, Jianyong Ouyang, Yue Hao
Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) have attracted much attention due to their high power conversion efficiency (PCE) and low cost fabrication. Since the PCE is critically related to the perovskite crystal morphology and quality, controlling the perovskite crystal formation is becoming more important. In this work, we chose PDDA polyelectrolyte as the crystal capping agent to modulate the perovskite thin film formation. The PDDA capping agent significantly enhanced the short-circuit current (J sc) and fill factor (FF) of the corresponding PSCs, which produced an optimal PCE of 14.1% compared to 12.5% of control device without the modifying agent. The effect of PDDA agent is examined by various techniques. It was found that improved surface morphology, enhanced crystallinity, and decreased grain boundary related defects are contributed to the performance and stability enhancement.

26 Jul 01:09

Understanding charge transport and recombination losses in high performance polymer solar cells with non-fullerene acceptors

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2017, 5,17230-17239
DOI: 10.1039/C7TA05865A, Communication
Xuning Zhang, Xiaobing Zuo, Shenkun Xie, Jianyu Yuan, Huiqiong Zhou, Yuan Zhang
Photovoltaic characteristics, recombination and charge transport properties are investigated. The determined recombination reduction factor can reconcile the supreme device performance in organic solar cells using non-fullerene ITIC acceptor and severe carrier losses in all-polymer devices with P(NDI2OD-T2).
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry
26 Jul 01:08

Dual functions of interface passivation and n-doping using 2,6-dimethoxypyridine for enhanced reproducibility and performance of planar perovskite solar cells

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2017, 5,17632-17639
DOI: 10.1039/C7TA04851C, Paper
Youyu Jiang, Jing Li, Sixing Xiong, Fangyuan Jiang, Tiefeng Liu, Fei Qin, Lin Hu, Yinhua Zhou
2,6-Dimethoxypyridine serves dual functions as a Lewis base for surface passivation and as a dopant for PC61BM in the fabrication of highly reproducible and high-efficiency planar perovskite solar cells.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry
26 Jul 01:08

Low band gap conjugated polymers combining siloxane-terminated side chains and alkyl side chains: side-chain engineering achieving a large active layer processing window for PCE > 10% in polymer solar cells

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2017, 5,17619-17631
DOI: 10.1039/C7TA05583H, Paper
Xuncheng Liu, Li Nian, Ke Gao, Lianjie Zhang, Lechi Qing, Zhen Wang, Lei Ying, Zengqi Xie, Yuguang Ma, Yong Cao, Feng Liu, Junwu Chen
Side-chain random copolymers show high 3-D hole transport and offer excellent active layer thickness tolerance.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry