Publication | Closed Access
Highly Efficient Low-Bandgap Polymer Solar Cells with Solution-Processed and Annealing-Free Phosphomolybdic Acid as Hole-Transport Layers
56
Citations
46
References
2015
Year
EngineeringOrganic ElectronicsOrganic Solar CellAnode BuffersHole-transport LayersPhotovoltaicsChemical EngineeringNovel Solution-processed MethodPolymer ChemistryAnnealing-free Phosphomolybdic AcidMaterials ScienceElectrical EngineeringEnergy StorageEnergy MaterialPerovskite Solar CellSemiconducting PolymerConjugated PolymerSolar CellsStable Anode
We demonstrate a novel solution-processed method to fabricate a stable anode buffer layer without any annealing process. As we know, buffer layers in polymer solar cells (PSCs) are always prepared by the traditional high-vacuum thermal evaporation or annealing-treated spin-coating methods, but the fabricating processes are complicated and time-consuming. Here, a solution method without any annealing to fabricate phosphomolybdic acid (PMA) as anode buffers is presented, which brings an obvious improvement of power conversion efficiency (PCE) from 1.75% to 6.57% by optimizing the PMA concentrations and interface pretreatment with device structure shown as ITO/TiO2/PCDTBT:PC70BM/PMA/Ag. The improvement is ascribed to the fine energy-level matching and perfect surface modification. This annealing-free method greatly simplifies the device fabrication process and supplies a wide way to achieve a large area fabrication for PSCs.
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