Concepedia

TLDR

The study presents additional experimental results and develops a comprehensive theoretical model to explain the photovoltaic properties of merocyanine-based MIS‑Schottky barrier solar cells. The high‑efficiency MIS‑Schottky barrier cell is based on merocyanine photosensitizing dyes, and the model incorporates exciton generation, transport, surface dissociation, and field‑dependent quantum efficiency. The devices achieve ~0.7% AM1 efficiency with a low 0.3 fill factor driven by field‑dependent quantum efficiency, an exciton diffusion length of 60 Å, diffusion potentials that rise with decreasing metal work function, and higher efficiencies when a very thin interfacial oxide layer is present.

Abstract

Recently, we reported on the development of a new thin-film organic solar cell with an AM1 sunlight efficiency of about 0.7% for large area devices (∼1 cm2). This relatively high-efficiency MIS-Schottky barrier-type cell was based on merocyanine type photosensitizing dyes. In this paper we present additional experimental results and develop a comprehensive theoretical model to explain the observed photovoltaic properties. The model incorporates the generation, transport, and surface dissociation of excitons and field-dependent quantum efficiency. The low fill factor of 0.3 was attributed mainly to the field dependence of quantum efficiency. An exciton diffusion length of 60 Å was determined by analyzing the short-circuit photocurrent action spectra using the theoretical model developed. The diffusion potentials for metal/merocyanine Schottky barrier cells for six different metals were determined by C-V measurements; the diffusion potential increases with decreasing work function. As solar cells, these devices have higher efficiencies when there is a very thin interfacial oxide layer between the barrier forming metal and merocyanine.

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