4.1 Article

Overcoming the voltage losses caused by the acceptor-based interlayer in laminated indoor OPVs

Journal

SMARTMAT
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/smm2.1237

Keywords

ideal morphology model; indoor organic photovoltaics; lamination; neutron reflectivity; solution processing

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Harvesting indoor light for electronic devices has become an application scenario for emerging photovoltaics, especially organic photovoltaics (OPVs). This study investigates the impact of fullerene-based acceptor interlayer on the performance of laminated OPVs for indoor applications. Incorporating insulating organic components into fullerene interlayers improves energy level alignment and reduces voltage loss across the interface.
Harvesting indoor light to power electronic devices for the Internet of Things has become an application scenario for emerging photovoltaics, especially utilizing organic photovoltaics (OPVs). Combined liquid- and solid-state processing, such as printing and lamination used in industry for developing indoor OPVs, also provides a new opportunity to investigate the device structure, which is otherwise hardly possible based on the conventional approach due to solvent orthogonality. This study investigates the impact of fullerene-based acceptor interlayer on the performance of conjugated polymer-fullerene-based laminated OPVs for indoor applications. We observe open-circuit voltage (V-OC) loss across the interface despite this arrangement being presumed to be ideal for optimal device performance. Incorporating insulating organic components such as polyethyleneimine (PEI) or polystyrene (PS) into fullerene interlayers decreases the work function of the cathode, leading to better energy level alignment with the active layer (AL) and reducing the V-OC loss across the interface. Neutron reflectivity studies further uncover two different mechanisms behind the V-OC increase upon the incorporation of these insulating organic components. The self-organized PEI layer could hinder the transfer of holes from the AL to the acceptor interlayer, while the gradient distribution of the PS-incorporated fullerene interlayer eliminates the thermalization losses. This work highlights the importance of structural dynamics near the extraction interfaces in OPVs and provides experimental demonstrations of interface investigation between solution-processed cathodic fullerene layer and bulk heterojunction AL.

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