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Thiophene Derivative Photovoltaics : Device Fabrication, Optimization and Study of Charge Transport CharacteristicsSwathi, S K January 2013 (has links) (PDF)
In the recent years area organic photovoltaics is generating a lot of interests because whole process of synthesis and fabrication is less energy intensive process as well as it is cost effective compared to conventional inorganic Si based photovoltaic technology. This work mainly deals with the fabrication and optimization of device fabrication conditions for organic photovoltaic materials.
In first part of the work, the solar cell fabrication conditions were optimized for the commonly used system P3HT – PCBM. The fabricated device was optimized for the solvents used for the active material, concentration of the active material solution, donor- acceptor ratio of the active material, annealing conditions of the active layer and the metal evaporation conditions for the cathode. All the optimization procedures were carried out in controlled atmosphere to minimize the environmental effect inference during fabrication of the solar cell devices. All the characterization was carried out at ambient conditions. The efficiency of the solar cell was improved from 0.009% to 6.2%. the environmental stability of the fabricated devices were carried out after encapsulating it with epoxy based resin in both ambient conditions as well as extreme conditions like 85% RH at 25°C inside the humidity chamber. It was observed that both the data matches well with each other indicating proper encapsulation required to safe guard the device for the better performance over the period of time.
Second part of this work mainly deals with understanding the structure property relationship of thiophene based donor- acceptor- donor molecule 2,5-dithienyl-3,4-(1,8-naphthylene) cyclopentadienone (DTCPA), which is highly crystalline, low band gap organic molecule which absorbs over entire visible region of the solar spectra. DTCPA crystals of various morphologies were prepared by various recrystallization routes. It was observed that macro scale morphology of these crystals differs from each other. Also depending on the method of recrystallization sizes of the crystals also varies. All the recrystallized DTCPA shows strong orientation toward (001) direction. However, it was observed that lattice parameters of these crystals slightly differ from each other owing to the recrystallization methodology. These variations in crystal parameters are more than 0.02 which is significant. It was also observed that the crystallite sizes depend on the recrystallization routes. Slow evaporation of concentrated solution (SEC) grown crystals has the larger crystallite size of 170nm. It was observed that absorption range of these crystals slightly differ from each other owing to the change in the crystallite sizes and crystal parameters.
Third part of this work deals with the fabrication and optimization of thermal evaporation process of DTCPA for photovoltaic applications. DTCPA is stable at higher temperatures as well as has sharp melting point which make it ideal candidate for thermal evaporation. In this work films of DTCPA were fabricated for various evaporation rates by thermal evaporation technique. Chemical integrity of the molecules upon evaporation is found to be intact as observed from FTIR spectroscopy. XRD shows that at lower (25 W/m2) as well as higher (40 W/m2) films are oriented to (001), (400) as well as (311) directions, at 30 W/m2 and 35 W/m2 there is a strong orientation towards (311) and (001) directions respectively. Photo luminescence studies indicate that there is strong 410 nm emission for films deposited at the power of 25 W/m2 and 40 W/m2. Microscopic studies confirm that morphology is dependent on the deposition rates as it changes with the change in deposition rate. This in turn reflects in the device characteristics of these films. It was observed that films deposited at high deposition rates show better device characteristics with high VOC and current density values. All these device fabrication and characterizations were carried out in ambient conditions.
Fourth part of this work deals with P3HT - DTCPA composites which exhibit wide range of light absorption. It was observed that DTCPA act as nucleating centers for the P3HT molecules and increases crystallinity in the composite. Furthermore, DTCPA helps in exciton separation because of donor and acceptor moieties present in the molecule. It also helps in charge transportation because of its crystalline nature and further it induces molecular ordering in the P3HT matrix. The band diagram of P3HT- DTCPA suggests that the band edges of both materials are ideal for charge separation. In addition, crystalline nature of the DTCPA molecule helps in effective charge transportation. J-V characteristics shows that there is large built in potential in the devices from these blends leading to large Voc. Composites with lower DTCPA loadings show higher efficiency than with higher loadings. These devices were prepared in ambient conditions and needs to be optimized for obtaining better device properties.
In the fifth part of the work two types of system were studied to understand the band edge matching on the photovoltaic properties, carbazole based copolymers and DTCPA based copolymers. In the case of carbazole based copolymers it was observed that by copolymerizing carbazole with thiophene based derivatives lowers the band gap and modifies the HOMO and LUMO levels for better suit for the photovoltaic device fabrication. It was observed that that is two orders of improvements in the efficiency by co polymerizing carbazole with benzothiodizole as improves the JSC and VOC. Also the copolymerization of carbazole with both benzothiodiazole and bithiophene results in better light harvesting as the optical band gap was lowered. In the case of DTCPA copolymers with DTBT and DHTBT as both are random copolymers the solubility was low as well as their HOMO band edge was mismatched with the PEDOT: PSS which is a hole transport layer. However, the alternate polymerization of DTCPA with DTBT improved the band edge matching and also the solubility. As a result there was tenfold improvement in the charge collection and hence the efficiency was improved from 0.02% to 2.4%.
Many of the conducting polymers have good material property but poor filmability. In the sixth part of this work deals with fabrication of device quality films by alternate deposition technique like pulsed laser deposition. Two types of system were studied in this work (i) polypyrrole- MWCNT nanocomposites and (ii) Poly DTCPA polymer. In both the cases it was observed that chemical integrity of the polymer retained during ablation. PolyDTCPA films were fabricated by pulsed laser deposition by both IR (Nd-YAG) and UV (KrF) laser source. Morphological studies indicate that IR laser ablated films were particulate in nature whereas UV laser ablated films were grown as continuous layers as polyDTCPA absorbs better in UV region. As a result the IV characteristics indicate that IR laser ablated films are resistive in nature and UV laser ablated films are good rectifiers indicating the suitability of the process for fabrication of device quality films.
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Influence of processing conditions on morphology and performance of vacuum deposited organic solar cellsHolzmüller, Felix 11 September 2017 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis discusses vacuum deposited organic solar cells. It focuses on the investigation of new donor molecules blended with the standard electron acceptor C60. These donor-acceptor heterojunctions form the photoactive system of organic solar cells. In addition, the influence of the processing conditions on the morphology of the blend layers is investigated, as the morphology is crucial for an efficient generation of free charge carriers upon photon absorption.
Bulk heterojunction solar cells with the donor DTDCTB are deposited at different substrate temperatures. We identify three substrate temperature regimes, discriminated by the behavior of the fill factor (FF ) as a function of the blend layer thickness. Devices deposited at RT have a maximum FF between 50 and 70 nm blend thickness, while devices deposited at 110 °C have a monotonically decreasing FF. At Tsub=85 °C, the devices have an S-kinked current-voltage curve. Grazing incidence wide angle X-ray scattering measurements show that this peculiar behavior of the FF is not correlated with a change in the crystallinity of the DTDCTB, which stays amorphous. Absorption measurements show that the average alignment of the molecules inside the blend also remains unchanged. Charge extraction measurements (OTRACE) reveal a mobility for the 110 °C device that is an order of magnitude higher than for the RT device. The difference in mobility can be explained by a higher trap density for the RT samples as measured by impedance spectroscopy. Despite slightly higher carrier lifetimes for the RT device obtained by transient photovoltage measurements, its mobility-lifetime product is still lower than for the 110 °C devices.
Based on DTDCTB, three new donor materials are designed to have a higher thermal stability in order to achieve higher yields upon material purification using gradient sublimation. For PRTF, the thermal stability is increased demonstrated by a higher yield upon sublimation. However, all new materials have a reduced absorption as compared to DTDCTB, which limits the short current density, and the FF is more sensitive to an increase of the blend layer thickness. The highest power conversion efficiency is achieved for a PRTF:C60 solar cell with 3.8%. Interestingly, PRTF:C60 solar cells show exceptionally low nonradiative voltage losses of only 0.26 V.
Another absorber molecule is the push-pull chromophore QM1. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) measurements show a growth of the molecule in nanowires on several substrates. The nanowires have lengths up to several micrometers and are several tens of nanometers wide. The formation of the nanowires is accompanied by a strong blue shift (650 meV) of the thin film absorption spectrum in comparison to the absorption in solution, which is attributed to H-aggregation of the molecules. Furthermore, the thin film absorption onset reaches up to 1100 nm, making the material a suitable candidate for a near infrared absorber in organic solar cells. For a solar cell in combination with C60, a power conversion efficiency of 1.9% was achieved with an external quantum efficiency of over 19% for the spectral range between 600 and 1000 nm.
The method of “co-evaporant induced crystallization” as a means to increase the crystallinity of blend layers without increasing the substrate temperature during the deposition is investigated. Mass spectrometry (LDI-ToF-MS) measurements show that polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), which is used as a co-evaporant, decomposes during the evaporation and only lighter oligomers evaporate. Quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) measurements prove that the detection of PDMS saturates at higher amounts of evaporated material. LDI-ToF-MS measurements show further that the determination of the volatilization temperature by QCM measurements is highly error prone. The method was applied to zinc phthalocyanine (ZnPc) :C60 solar cells, accepting the insertion of PDMS into the blend layer. Diffraction (GIXRD) measurements show a large increase in crystallinity. ZnPc:C60 solar cells produced by applying the method reveal a similar behavior as solar cells processed at a higher substrate temperature.
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Photovoltaïque organique : étude des interactions électroniques aux interfaces des hétérojonctions organiques / Organic photovoltaics : study of electronic interactions at interfaces in organic heterojunctionsLe Borgne, Damien 04 October 2016 (has links)
Du fait de leur faible coût de production et de leur intégration possible sur substrat flexible, les cellules photovoltaïques organiques sont prometteuses pour répondre aux besoins futurs en énergie. Leurs performances reposent sur l'architecture de la cellule et sur la nature des matériaux choisis. Par conséquent, le contrôle à l'échelle nanométrique de la couche active (formation de nanodomaines purs, organisation moléculaire...), ainsi que le développement de nouvelles molécules aux propriétés électroniques et structurales optimisées apparaissent comme des paramètres clés. Dans ce contexte, les travaux présentés dans cette thèse visent à étudier le lien entre la morphologie des films minces et les propriétés de transport à l'échelle nanométrique en fonction des matériaux actifs utilisés. Pour cela deux voies ont été explorées. La première voie repose sur l'utilisation des propriétés d'auto-organisation des cristaux liquides pour améliorer la formation et l'organisation de nanodomaines. Pour cette étude, nous avons choisi d'associer un donneur d'électron classique, le poly-3-hexylthiophène (P3HT), et de le mélanger avec un complexe de nickel [Ni(4dopedt)2] possédant des propriétés cristallines liquides colonnaires. L'étude par Microscopie à Force Atomique (AFM), Conductive-AFM (C-AFM), absorption UV-visible et spectrométrie Raman des films de mélanges démontre l'effet structurant du cristal liquide sur les chaînes de P3HT, en fonction de l'épaisseur de la couche et des traitements thermiques effectués. La deuxième voie explorée repose sur l'ingénierie moléculaire. Suite à une étude bibliographique, nous avons conçu puis synthétisé différentes petites molécules fluorées capables d'agir comme accepteurs d'électrons. Leur synthèse est réalisée en plusieurs étapes, privilégiant une méthode de couplage innovante, l'hétéroarylation directe. Les molécules obtenues ont été caractérisées par les techniques analytiques classiques, puis soumises à une étude de relation structures/propriétés. D'une part, les analyses optiques, électrochimique et thermique ont révélé leur grande stabilité et leur intérêt potentiel pour l'application visée. D'autre part, leur étude en film mince, par spectroscopie d'absorption UV-visible, de fluorescence et par AFM, révèle l'influence de la substitution du squelette conjugué par des atomes de fluor ainsi que de la modification des chaînes alkyles des groupements terminaux sur les propriétés optoélectroniques et structurelles des molécules. / Organic solar cells appear as a promising technology to meet future energy requirements, owing to their low production costs, their great flexibility and their ability to be integrated into light devices. Their performances rely on their architecture and the nature of the chosen materials. As a consequence, two of the key parameters for their development are the control the active layer at a nanometric scale (molecular organisation and the formation of pure compound nanodomains) and the development of new small molecules with optimized electronic and structural properties. This work comes in that aim : the study of the relation between thin film morphology and transport properties at the nanometric scale as function of the chosen materials. Two ways have been explored. The first way relied on self-organisation properties of a liquid crystal for improving the formation and organisation of nanodomains. In this purpose, we have associated a well-known electron donor, the poly-3-hexylthiophene (P3HT), with a complex of nickel, named as [Ni(4dopedt)2], exhibiting columnar liquid crystal properties. Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM), Conductive-AFM (C-AFM), UV-visible absorption and Raman spectroscopy on bulk films have shown the structuring effect of the liquid crystal on the P3HT chains as a function of the films thicknesses and thermal annealing. The second way was based on molecular engineering. Following a bibliographic study, we have designed and synthetized different fluorinated small molecules with electron acceptor capability. For this, a more economical and cleaner synthesis technique has been employed: the direct arylation. These molecules have been characterized by classical analytic technics, and a study of the relation between structure and properties has been carried out. On the one hand, optical, electrochemical and thermal analyses have shown their good stability and their potential for the aimed application. On the other hand, their study in thin film by UV-visible absorption, fluorescence and AFM have shown the influence of backbone substitution by fluorine atoms as well as the impact of the nature of alkyl end chains on the optoelectronic and structural properties of these molecules.
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Metal oxide/organic interface investigations for photovoltaic devicesPachoumi, Olympia January 2014 (has links)
This thesis outlines investigations of metal oxide/organic interfaces in photo-voltaic devices. It focuses on device instabilities originating from the metal oxide layer surface sensitivity and it presents suggested mechanisms behind these in- stabilities. A simple sol-gel solution deposition technique for the fabrication of stable and highly performing transparent conducting mixed metal oxides (ZnMO) is presented. It is demonstrated that the use of amorphous, mixed metal oxides allows improving the performance and stability of interfacial charge extraction layers for organic solar cells. Two novel ternary metal oxides, zinc-strontrium- oxide (ZnSrO) and zinc-barium-oxide (ZnBaO), were fabricated and their use as electron extraction layers in inverted organic photovoltaics is investigated. We show that using these ternary oxides can lead to superior devices by: prevent- ing a dipole forming between the oxide and the active organic layer in a model ZnMO/P3HT:PCBM OPV as well as lead to improved surface coverage by a self assembled monolayer and promote a significantly improved charge separation efficiency in a ZnMO/P3HT hybrid device. Additionally a spectroscopic technique allowing a versatility of characterisa- tion for long-term stability investigations of organic solar cells is reported. A device instability under broadband light exposure in vacuum conditions for an inverted ZnSrO/PTB7:PC71BM OPV is observed. Direct spectroscopic evidence and electrical characterisation indicate the formation of the PC71BM radical an- ion associated with a loss in device performance. A charge transfer mechanism between a heavily doped oxide layer and the organic layers is suggested and dis- cussed.
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Nové diketopyrrolopyrroly pro organickou fotovoltaiku / Novel diketopyrrolopyrroles for organic photovoltaicsHrabal, Michal January 2013 (has links)
The aim of this diploma thesis is to conduct optical and photovoltaic characterization of derivatives of diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP) as materials suitable for fabrication of bulk heterojunction organic solar cells. The charge transfer from donor material (DPP) to acceptor material (PCBM) is studied by a quenching of fluorescence. The photovoltaic response is studied by current – voltage characteristic which can tell us crucial parameters such as shor circuit current density Jsc, open circuit voltage Voc, fill factor FF and power conversion efficiency PCE. Optical characterization was carried out for symmetrical DPP derivatives (U69 and U97) which both contained diphenylaminstilbene moiety and differed in N-alkyl group. On the other hand photovoltaic characterization was conducted for analogous but asymmetrical materials (U70 and U99). Material U29 was characterized as well but its properties proved to be very poor. Both these characterizations tell us that materials with shorter solubilization groups (U69 and U99) are more suitable candidates. Achieved PCE for U70 was 0,74 % and for U99 up to 1,39 %. From these values one can say that small molecule organic materials can be used for fabrication of solar cells.
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Elektrické a dielektrické vlastnosti organických materiálů pro fotovoltaické aplikace / Electric and dielectric properties of organic materials for photovoltaic applicationsFlorián, Pavel January 2014 (has links)
Diploma thesis deals with the use of organic materials in photovoltaic applications and the study of their electric and dielectric properties. The theoretical part of thesis deals issue of the use of organic polymeric materials in photovoltaics and their advantages and disadvantages. Next are the results of various studies of organic solar cells by other authors. In the practical part of the work are shown experimental results (volt-ampere characteristics and impedance spectra) of samples of organic semiconductors and their evaluation.
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Optimalizace vícevrstvých struktur pro organickou elektroniku / Optimization of multilayer structures for organic electronicsParuzel, Bartosz January 2019 (has links)
Organic electronic devices such as organic field effect transistors (OFETs), light- emitting diodes (OLEDs), resistive memory elements or organic solar cells have attracted an increasing attention in recent years due to the vision of a low-cost and large-scale production of printable electronics. Many papers published during the last decade focused on the intrinsic properties of organic conductors, semiconductors and dielectric materials. Since most of the devices consist of multilayer structures the mutual influence of the processes that take place in the particular layers are important for the functionality of the whole device. This work is aimed to contribute to the characterization and understanding of the mutual interactions of individual layers in the multilayer structures of organic devices. The main achievements of this work can be listed as: (i) Optimization of the thermal stability and dielectric properties of cyanoethylated polyvinylalcohol (CEPVA) high-k dielectric by the crosslinking reaction with the low molecular weight materials or mixing with a high Tg polymer. (ii) Finding possible phenomena in the CEPVA polymer dielectric that influence the charge carrier transport in the OFET active channel made of bis(triisopropylsilylethynyl) pentacene organic semiconductor, using a...
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Influence of processing conditions on morphology and performance of vacuum deposited organic solar cellsHolzmüller, Felix 30 March 2017 (has links)
This thesis discusses vacuum deposited organic solar cells. It focuses on the investigation of new donor molecules blended with the standard electron acceptor C60. These donor-acceptor heterojunctions form the photoactive system of organic solar cells. In addition, the influence of the processing conditions on the morphology of the blend layers is investigated, as the morphology is crucial for an efficient generation of free charge carriers upon photon absorption.
Bulk heterojunction solar cells with the donor DTDCTB are deposited at different substrate temperatures. We identify three substrate temperature regimes, discriminated by the behavior of the fill factor (FF ) as a function of the blend layer thickness. Devices deposited at RT have a maximum FF between 50 and 70 nm blend thickness, while devices deposited at 110 °C have a monotonically decreasing FF. At Tsub=85 °C, the devices have an S-kinked current-voltage curve. Grazing incidence wide angle X-ray scattering measurements show that this peculiar behavior of the FF is not correlated with a change in the crystallinity of the DTDCTB, which stays amorphous. Absorption measurements show that the average alignment of the molecules inside the blend also remains unchanged. Charge extraction measurements (OTRACE) reveal a mobility for the 110 °C device that is an order of magnitude higher than for the RT device. The difference in mobility can be explained by a higher trap density for the RT samples as measured by impedance spectroscopy. Despite slightly higher carrier lifetimes for the RT device obtained by transient photovoltage measurements, its mobility-lifetime product is still lower than for the 110 °C devices.
Based on DTDCTB, three new donor materials are designed to have a higher thermal stability in order to achieve higher yields upon material purification using gradient sublimation. For PRTF, the thermal stability is increased demonstrated by a higher yield upon sublimation. However, all new materials have a reduced absorption as compared to DTDCTB, which limits the short current density, and the FF is more sensitive to an increase of the blend layer thickness. The highest power conversion efficiency is achieved for a PRTF:C60 solar cell with 3.8%. Interestingly, PRTF:C60 solar cells show exceptionally low nonradiative voltage losses of only 0.26 V.
Another absorber molecule is the push-pull chromophore QM1. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) measurements show a growth of the molecule in nanowires on several substrates. The nanowires have lengths up to several micrometers and are several tens of nanometers wide. The formation of the nanowires is accompanied by a strong blue shift (650 meV) of the thin film absorption spectrum in comparison to the absorption in solution, which is attributed to H-aggregation of the molecules. Furthermore, the thin film absorption onset reaches up to 1100 nm, making the material a suitable candidate for a near infrared absorber in organic solar cells. For a solar cell in combination with C60, a power conversion efficiency of 1.9% was achieved with an external quantum efficiency of over 19% for the spectral range between 600 and 1000 nm.
The method of “co-evaporant induced crystallization” as a means to increase the crystallinity of blend layers without increasing the substrate temperature during the deposition is investigated. Mass spectrometry (LDI-ToF-MS) measurements show that polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), which is used as a co-evaporant, decomposes during the evaporation and only lighter oligomers evaporate. Quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) measurements prove that the detection of PDMS saturates at higher amounts of evaporated material. LDI-ToF-MS measurements show further that the determination of the volatilization temperature by QCM measurements is highly error prone. The method was applied to zinc phthalocyanine (ZnPc) :C60 solar cells, accepting the insertion of PDMS into the blend layer. Diffraction (GIXRD) measurements show a large increase in crystallinity. ZnPc:C60 solar cells produced by applying the method reveal a similar behavior as solar cells processed at a higher substrate temperature.
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Organic Photovoltaic Optimization: A Functionalized Device Based ApproachTheibert, Dustin January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Oligothiophene Materials for Organic Solar Cells - Photophysics and Device Properties / Oligothiophenmoleküle für Organische Solarzellen - Photophysik und SolarzelleigenschaftenKörner, Christian 25 September 2013 (has links) (PDF)
The rapidly increasing power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) of organic solar cells (OSCs) above 10% were made possible by concerted international research activities in the last few years, aiming to understand the processes that lead to the generation of free charge carriers following photon absorption. Despite these efforts, many details are still unknown, especially how these processes can be improved already at the drawing board of molecular design. To unveil this information, dicyanovinyl end-capped oligothiophene derivatives (DCVnTs) are used as a model system in this thesis, allowing to investigate the impact of small structural changes on the molecular properties and the final solar cells.
On thin films of a methylated DCV4T derivative, the influence of the measurement temperature on the charge carrier generation process is investigated. The observed temperature activation in photoinduced absorption (PIA) measurements is attributed to an increased charge carrier mobility, increasing the distance between the charges at the donor/acceptor (D/A) interface and, thus, facilitating their final dissociation. The correlation between the activation energy and the mobility is confirmed using a DCV6T derivative with lower mobility , exhibiting a higher activation energy for charge carrier generation.
Another parameter to influence the charge carrier generation process is the molecular structure. Here, alkyl side chains with varying length are introduced and their influence on the intramolecular energy levels as well as the absorption and emission properties in pristine and blend films with the acceptor C60 are examined. The observed differences in intermolecular order (higher order for shorter side chains) and phase separation in blend layers (larger phase separation for shorter side chains) are confirmed in PIA measurements upon comparing the temperature dependence of the triplet exciton lifetimes. A proposed correlation between the side chain length and the coupling between D and A, which is crucial for efficient charge transfer, is not confirmed. The presented flat heterojunction solar cells underline this conclusion, giving similar photocurrent densities for all compounds. Differences in PCE are related to shifts of the energy levels and the morphology of the blend layer in bulk heterojunction devices.
Furthermore, the impact of the electric field on the charge carrier generation yield is investigated in a proof-of-principle study, introducing PIA measurements in transmission geometry realized using semitransparent solar cells. The recombination analysis of the photogenerated charge carriers reveals two recombination components. Trapped charge carriers or bound charge pairs at the D/A interface are proposed as an explanation for this result. The miscibility of D and A, which can be influenced by heating the substrate during layer deposition, is of crucial importance to obtain high PCEs. In this work, the unusual negative influence of the substrate temperature on DCV4T:C60 blend layers in solar cells is investigated. By using optical measurements and structure determination tools, a rearrangement of the DCV4T crystallites is found to be responsible for the reduced absorption and, therefore, photocurrent at higher substrate temperature. The proposed blend morphology at a substrate temperature of 90° C is characterized by a nearly complete demixing of the D and A phases. This investigation is of particular relevance, because it shows the microscopic origins of a behavior that is contrary to the increase of the PCE upon substrate heating usually reported in literature.
Finally, the optimization steps to achieve a record PCE of 7.7% using a DCV5T derivative as donor material are presented, including the optimization of the substrate temperature, the active layer thickness, and the transport layers. / Der rasante Anstieg des Wirkungsgrads von organischen Solarzellen über die Marke von 10% war nur durch länderübergreifende Forschungsaktivitäten während der letzten Jahre möglich. Trotz der gemeinsamen Anstrengungen, die Prozesse, die zwischen der Absorption der Photonen und der Ladungsträgererzeugung liegen, genauer zu verstehen, sind einige Fragen jedoch immer noch ungelöst, z.B. wie diese Prozesse schon auf dem Reißbrett durch die gezielte Änderung bestimmter Molekülstrukturen optimiert werden können. Um dieses Ziel zu erreichen, werden in dieser Arbeit Dicyanovinyl-substituierte Oligothiophene (DCVnTs) verwendet. Diese Materialien bieten die Möglichkeit, kleine strukturelle Änderungen vorzunehmen, deren Einfluss auf die molekularen und auf die Solarzelleneigenschaften untersucht werden soll.
Der Einfluss der Messtemperatur auf den Prozess der Ladungsträgertrennung wird hier an einer methylierten DCV4T-Verbindung in einer dünnen Schicht untersucht. Die bei photoinduzierter Absorptionsspektroskopie (PIA) beobachtete Aktivierung dieses Prozesses mit zunehmender Temperatur wird auf eine erhöhte Ladungsträgerbeweglichkeit zurückgeführt. Der dadurch erhöhte effektive Abstand der Ladungen an der Grenzfläche zwischen Donator (D) und Akzeptor (A) erleichtert die endgültige Trennung der Ladungsträger. Durch den Vergleich mit einer DCV6T-Verbindung wird der Zusammenhang zwischen der Aktivierungsenergie und der Beweglichkeit bekräftigt. Die kleinere Beweglichkeit äußert sich dabei in einer größeren Aktivierungsenergie.
Darüber hinaus kann der Ladungsträgergenerationsprozess auch von der Molekülstruktur abhängen. In dieser Arbeit wird untersucht, wie sich die Länge von Alkylseitenketten auf die Energieniveaus der Moleküle, aber auch auf die Absorptions- und Lumineszenzeigenschaften der Materialien in reinen und in Mischschichten mit dem Akzeptor C60 äußert. Die ermittelten Unterschiede bezüglich der Molekülordnung (geordneter für kürzere Seitenketten) und der Phasengrößen in Mischschichten (größere Phasen bei kürzerer Kettenlänge) werden in der Untersuchung der Temperaturabhängigkeit der Lebensdauer von Triplettexzitonen mittels PIA-Messungen bestätigt. Für Solarzellen ist von Bedeutung, ob sich die Seitenkettenlänge auf die Wechselwirkung zwischen D und A auswirkt. Der vermutete Zusammenhang wird hier nicht bestätigt. Ein ähnlicher Photostrom für alle untersuchten Verbindungen in Solarzellen mit planaren Heteroübergängen unterstreicht diese Schlussfolgerung. Unterschiede im Wirkungsgrad werden auf Änderungen der Energieniveaus und die Morphologie in Mischschichtsolarzellen zurückgeführt.
Des Weiteren wird in einer Machbarkeitsstudie der Einfluss des elektrischen Felds auf die Generationsausbeute freier Ladungsträger untersucht. Dafür werden halbtransparente Solarzellen verwendet, die es ermöglichen, PIA-Messungen in Transmissionsgeometrie durchzuführen. Als mögliche Erklärung für das Auftreten zweier Rekombinationskomponenten in der Analyse des Rekombinationsverhaltens der durch Licht erzeugten Ladungsträger werden eingefangene Ladungsträger und gebundene Ladungsträgerpaare an der D/A-Grenzfläche genannt. Das Mischverhalten von D und A kann durch ein Heizen des Substrates während des Verdampfungsprozesses eingestellt werden, was von entscheidender Bedeutung für eine weitere Steigerung des Wirkungsgrades ist. Für DCV4T:C60-Mischschichtsolarzellen wird jedoch eine Verschlechterung des Wirkungsgrads zu höheren Substrattemperaturen beobachtet. Durch optische Messungen und Methoden zur Schichtstrukturbestimmung wird dieser Effekt auf eine Umordnung der DCV4T-Kristallite für hohe Substrattemperaturen und die damit verbundene Verringerung der Absorption und damit auch des Photostroms zurückgeführt. Bei einer Substrattemperatur von 90° C sind die D- und A-Komponenten fast vollständig entmischt. Dieses Beispiel ist von besonderer Bedeutung, weil hier die Ursachen für ein Verhalten aufgezeigt werden, das entgegen den Beispielen aus der Literatur eine Abnahme des Wirkungsgrads beim Aufdampfen der aktiven Schicht auf ein geheiztes Substrat zeigt.
Schließlich werden die Optimierungsschritte dargelegt, mit denen Solarzellen mit einer DCV5T-Verbindung als Donatormaterial auf einen Rekordwirkungsgrad von 7,7% gebracht werden. Dabei wird die Substrattemperatur, die Dicke der aktiven Schicht und die Transportschichten angepasst.
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