4.8 Article

Origin, Nature, and Location of Defects in PM6:Y6 Organic Solar Cells

Journal

ADVANCED ENERGY MATERIALS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/aenm.202300003

Keywords

energy resolved-electrochemical impedance spectroscopy; external quantum efficiency; organic solar cells; ozone; sub-bandgap defects

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Insight into the identity and origin of defects in organic semiconductors is crucial for targeted strategies to overcome them. The study focuses on PM6:Y6 organic solar cells and reveals that defects are formed by a trace constituent in ambient air and O-3. Aging in H2O-saturated compressed air also increases the defect response by modifying the work function of MoO3. Measurement of energy resolved-electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and different cell structures confirm that defects mainly originate from PM6 and are located near the top electrode.
Targeted strategies to overcome defects in organic semiconductors require insight into their identity and origin. Here the formation, nature, and location of defects is studied in PM6:Y6 organic solar cells by sensitive EQE measurements. Exposure of the active layer to ambient atmosphere and H2O-saturated compressed air indicates that a trace constituent in ambient air causes the formation of defects. By exposing the active layer to O-3-enriched air, O-3 is identified as the species creating defects in PM6:Y6 blends. Aging of complete inverted (n-i-p) configuration solar cells in H2O-saturated compressed air also increases the defect response. This is attributed to a reduced band bending at the PM6:Y6 | MoO3 hole-collecting contact, caused by a change in work function of MoO3 interacting with the H2O, which allows more defect states to be filled and available for photoexcitation. By measuring energy resolved-electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and by fabricating semitransparent cells, regular architecture cells, and semitransparent cells with an optical spacer-mirror stack it is found that defects originate predominantly from PM6 and are located near the top electrode, independent of device polarity. Because O-3 is omnipresent in ambient atmosphere, albeit in small amounts, it likely causes defects in many organic semiconductors exposed to ambient air.

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