TY - JOUR
T1 - Open-Circuit Voltage in Organic Solar Cells
T2 - The Impacts of Donor Semicrystallinity and Coexistence of Multiple Interfacial Charge-Transfer Bands
AU - Ndjawa, Guy O.Ngongang
AU - Graham, Kenneth R.
AU - Mollinger, Sonya
AU - Wu, Di M.
AU - Hanifi, David
AU - Prasanna, Rohit
AU - Rose, Bradley D.
AU - Dey, Sukumar
AU - Yu, Liyang
AU - Brédas, Jean Luc
AU - McGehee, Michael D.
AU - Salleo, Alberto
AU - Amassian, Aram
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
PY - 2017/6/21
Y1 - 2017/6/21
N2 - In organic solar cells (OSCs), the energy of the charge-transfer (CT) complexes at the donor–acceptor interface, E CT, determines the maximum open-circuit voltage (V OC). The coexistence of phases with different degrees of order in the donor or the acceptor, as in blends of semi-crystalline donors and fullerenes in bulk heterojunction layers, influences the distribution of CT states and the V OC enormously. Yet, the question of how structural heterogeneities alter CT states and the V OC is seldom addressed systematically. In this work, we combine experimental measurements of vacuum-deposited rubrene/C60 bilayer OSCs, with varying microstructure and texture, with density functional theory calculations to determine how relative molecular orientations and extents of structural order influence E CT and V OC. We find that varying the microstructure of rubrene gives rise to CT bands with varying energies. The CT band that originates from crystalline rubrene lies up to ≈0.4 eV lower in energy compared to the one that arises from amorphous rubrene. These low-lying CT states contribute strongly to V OC losses and result mainly from hole delocalization in aggregated rubrene. This work points to the importance of realizing interfacial structural control that prevents the formation of low E CT configurations and maximizes V OC.
AB - In organic solar cells (OSCs), the energy of the charge-transfer (CT) complexes at the donor–acceptor interface, E CT, determines the maximum open-circuit voltage (V OC). The coexistence of phases with different degrees of order in the donor or the acceptor, as in blends of semi-crystalline donors and fullerenes in bulk heterojunction layers, influences the distribution of CT states and the V OC enormously. Yet, the question of how structural heterogeneities alter CT states and the V OC is seldom addressed systematically. In this work, we combine experimental measurements of vacuum-deposited rubrene/C60 bilayer OSCs, with varying microstructure and texture, with density functional theory calculations to determine how relative molecular orientations and extents of structural order influence E CT and V OC. We find that varying the microstructure of rubrene gives rise to CT bands with varying energies. The CT band that originates from crystalline rubrene lies up to ≈0.4 eV lower in energy compared to the one that arises from amorphous rubrene. These low-lying CT states contribute strongly to V OC losses and result mainly from hole delocalization in aggregated rubrene. This work points to the importance of realizing interfacial structural control that prevents the formation of low E CT configurations and maximizes V OC.
KW - charge-transfer states
KW - open-circuit voltage
KW - organic photovoltaics
KW - semicrystalline donor
KW - small molecule organic solar cells
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U2 - 10.1002/aenm.201601995
DO - 10.1002/aenm.201601995
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85009926790
SN - 1614-6832
VL - 7
JO - Advanced Energy Materials
JF - Advanced Energy Materials
IS - 12
ER -