4.8 Article

Reliability of Small Molecule Organic Photovoltaics with Electron-Filtering Compound Buffer Layers

Journal

ADVANCED ENERGY MATERIALS
Volume 6, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/aenm.201601094

Keywords

degradation; solar cells; thermal activation

Funding

  1. United States Department of Energy SunShot Program [DE-EE0006708, DE-EE0005310]
  2. Nanoflex Power Corp
  3. US-Israel Binational Science Foundation
  4. Ente Nazionale Energia e Ambiente
  5. Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs

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Electron-filtering compound buffer layers (EF-CBLs) improve charge extraction in organic photovoltaic cells (OPVs) by blending an electron-conducting fullerene with a wide energy gap exciton-blocking molecule. It is found that devices with EF-CBLs with high glass transition temperatures and a low crystallization rate produce highly stable morphologies and devices. The most stable OPVs employ 1:1 2,2,2-(1,3,5-benzenetriyl tris-[1-phenyl-1H-benzimidazole] TPBi:C-70 buffers that lose <20% of their initial power conversion efficiency of 6.6 +/- 0.6% after 2700 h under continuous simulated AM1.5G illumination, and show no significant degradation after 100 days of outdoor aging. When exposed to 100-sun (100 kW m(-2)) concentrated solar illumination for 5 h, their power conversion efficiencies decrease by <8%. Moreover, it is found that the reliability of the devices employing stable EF-CBLs has either reduced or no dependence on operating temperature up to 130 degrees C compared with BPhen:C-60 devices whose fill factors show thermally activated degradation. The robustness of TPBi:C-70 devices under extreme aging conditions including outdoor exposure, high temperature, and concentrated illumination is promising for the future of OPV as a stable solar cell technology.

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