Publication | Open Access
Optical, Electrical, and Magnetic Studies of Organic Solar Cells Based on Low Bandgap Copolymer with Spin ½ Radical Additives
53
Citations
41
References
2015
Year
EngineeringOrganic ElectronicsOrganic Solar CellPhotovoltaic DevicesChemistryMagnetic StudiesPhotovoltaicsElectronic DevicesSteady StateSolar Cell StructuresPolymer ChemistryMaterials SciencePhotochemistryOrganic SemiconductorOrganic Solar CellsExciton FormationOrganic Charge-transfer CompoundElectronic MaterialsPolymer ScienceApplied PhysicsLow Bandgap CopolymerThin FilmsSolar CellsFunctional MaterialsSolar Cell Materials
The charge photogeneration and recombination processes in organic photovoltaic solar cells based on blend of the low bandgap copolymer, PTB7 (fluorinated poly‐thienothiophene‐benzodithiophene) with C60‐PCBM using optical, electrical, and magnetic measurements in thin films and devices is studied. A variety of steady state optical and magneto‐optical techniques were employed, such as photoinduced absorption (PA), magneto‐PA, doping‐induced absorption, and PA‐detected magnetic resonance (PADMR); as well as picosecond time‐resolved PA. The charge polarons and triplet exciton dynamics in films of pristine PTB7, PTB7/fullerene donor–acceptor (D–A) blend is followed. It is found that a major loss mechanism that limits the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of PTB7‐based solar cell devices is the “back reaction” that leads to triplet exciton formation in the polymer donor from the photogenerated charge‐transfer excitons at the D–A interfaces. A method of suppressing this “back reaction” by adding spin½ radicals Galvinoxyl to the D–A blend is presented; this enhances the cell PCE by ≈30%. The same method is not effective for cells based on PTB7/C70‐PCBM blend, where high PCE is reached even without Galvinoxyl radical additives.
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