4.7 Article

Characterising Exciton Generation in Bulk-Heterojunction Organic Solar Cells

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano11010209

Keywords

excitons; organic solar cells; non-fullerene; bulk heterojunction; electric field

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This paper characterises exciton generation in three types of bulk-heterojunction organic solar cells, finding that the optimum thickness of the active layer affects the rate of exciton generation. Simulated results indicate that the inverted non-fullerene BHJ OSC1 shows better short circuit current density, potentially leading to better photovoltaic performance.
In this paper, characterisation of exciton generation is carried out in three bulk-heterojunction organic solar cells (BHJ OSCs)-OSC1: an inverted non-fullerene (NF) BHJ OSC; OSC2: a conventional NF BHJ OSC; and OSC3: a conventional fullerene BHJ OSC. It is found that the overlap of the regions of strong constructive interference of incident and reflected electric fields of electromagnetic waves and those of high photon absorption within the active layer depends on the active layer thickness. An optimal thickness of the active layer can thus be obtained at which this overlap is maximum. We have simulated the rates of total exciton generation and position dependent exciton generation within the active layer as a function of the thicknesses of all the layers in all three OSCs and optimised their structures. Based on our simulated results, the inverted NF BHJ OSC1 is found to have better short circuit current density which may lead to better photovoltaic performance than the other two. It is expected that the results of this paper may provide guidance in fabricating highly efficient and cost effective BHJ OSCs.

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