4.8 Article

Dramatic improvement in the stability and mechanism of high-performance inverted polymer solar cells featuring a solution-processed buffer layer

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 15, Issue 7, Pages 3375-3386

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2nr05847b

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In this study, the researchers used solution-processed s-MoO3 as a hole transport layer in PTB7:PC71BM polymer solar cells. The cells exhibited excellent stability and maintained their initial power conversion efficiency after thermal aging for at least 2200 hours. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analysis revealed the mechanism behind the formation of the robust s-MoO3 layer and how it prevented thermal degradation of the cells.
In this study, we demonstrate inverted PTB7:PC71BM polymer solar cells (PSCs) featuring a solution-processed s-MoO3 hole transport layer (HTL) that can, after thermal aging at 85 degrees C, retain their initial power conversion efficiency (PCE) for at least 2200 h. The T-80 lifetimes of the PSCs incorporating the novel s-MoO3 HTL were up to ten times greater than those currently reported for PTB7- or low-band-gap polymer:PCBM PSCs, the result of the inhibition of burn-in losses and long-term degradation under various heat-equivalent testing conditions. We used X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) to study devices containing thermally deposited t-MoO3 and s-MoO3 HTLs and obtain a mechanistic understanding of how the robust HTL is formed and how it prevented the PSCs from undergoing thermal degradation. Heat tests revealed that the mechanisms of thermal inter-diffusion and interaction of various elements within active layer/HTL/Ag electrodes controlled by the s-MoO3 HTL were dramatically different from those controlled by the t-MoO3 HTL. The new prevention mechanism revealed here can provide the conceptual strategy for designing the buffer layer in the future. The PCEs of PSCs featuring s-MoO3 HTLs, measured in damp-heat (65 degrees C/65% RH; 85 degrees C per air) and light soaking tests, confirmed their excellent stability. Such solution-processed MoO3 HTLs appear to have great potential as replacements for commonly used t-MoO3 HTLs.

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