4.6 Article

Rubrene single crystal solar cells and the effect of crystallinity on interfacial recombination

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 24, Issue 18, Pages 10869-10876

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2cp00985d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research [N0001416-1-2612, N000147-14-1-0053]
  2. Turkey research fellowship [TUBITAK 2214/A-1059B141501315]
  3. Turkey Scholarship Council [2214/A-1059B141501316]
  4. 1003 -Primary Subjects R&D Funding Program [218M940]

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Single crystal studies provide a better understanding of the basic properties of organic photovoltaic devices. This work investigates the effects of different forms of rubrene (single crystal, polycrystalline, and amorphous) on the charge carrier recombination mechanism in organic solar cells. The results show that single crystal devices are less affected by trap assisted recombination compared to amorphous and polycrystalline devices.
Single crystal studies provide a better understanding of the basic properties of organic photovoltaic devices. Therefore, in this work, rubrene single crystals with a thickness of 250 nm to 1000 nm were used to produce an inverted bilayer organic solar cell. Subsequently, polycrystalline rubrene (orthorhombic, triclinic) and amorphous bilayer solar cells of the same thickness as single crystals were studied to make comparisons across platforms. To investigate how single crystal, polycrystalline (triclinic-orthorhombic) and amorphous forms alter the charge carrier recombination mechanism at the rubrene/PCBM interface, light intensity measurements were carried out. The light intensity dependency of the J(SC), V-OC and FF parameters in organic solar cells with different forms of rubrene was determined. Monomolecular (Shockley Read Hall) recombination is observed in devices employing amorphous and polycrystalline rubrene in addition to bimolecular recombination, whereas the single crystal device is weakly affected by trap assisted SRH recombination due to reduced trap states at the donor acceptor interface. To date, the proposed work is the only systematic study examining transport and interface recombination mechanisms in organic solar cells produced by different structure forms of rubrene.

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