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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Transparent Electrodes for Organic Solar Cells / Transparente Elektroden für organische Solarzellen

Selzer, Franz 29 March 2016 (has links) (PDF)
The aim of this work was to investigate silver nanowire as well as carbon nanotube networks as transparent conducting electrodes for small molecule organic solar cells. In the framework of the nanowire investigations, a low-temperature method at less than 80 °C is developed to obtain highly conductive networks directly after the deposition and without post-processing. In detail, specific non-conductive organic materials act as a matrix where the nanowires are embedded in such that a mutual attraction based on capillary forces and hydrophobic interaction is created. This process is mediated by the ethanol contained in the nanowire dispersion and works only for sublayer materials which exhibit hydrophobic and hydrophilic groups at the same time. In contrast to high-temperature processed reference electrodes (210 °C for 90 min) without matrix, a slightly lower sheet resistance of 10.8 Ohm/sq at a transparency of 80.4 % (including substrate) is obtained by using polyvinylpyrrolidone as the sublayer material. In comparison to annealed silver nanowire networks, the novel approach yields a performance enhancement in corresponding organic solar cells which can compete with ITO-based devices. Furthermore, a novel approach for scalable, highly conductive, and transparent silver nanowire top-electrodes for organic optoelectronic devices is introduced. By utilizing a perfluorinated methacrylate as stabilizer, silver nanowires with high aspect ratio can be transferred into inert solvents which do not dissolve most organic compounds making this modified dispersion compatible with small molecule and polymer-based organic optoelectronic devices. The inert silver nanowire dispersion yields highly performing top-electrodes with a sheet resistance of 10.0 Ohm/sq at 80.0 % transparency (including substrate) directly after low-temperature deposition at 30 °C and without further post-processing. In comparison to similarly prepared reference devices comprising a thin-metal film as transparent top-electrode, reasonable power conversion efficiencies are demonstrated by spray-coating this dispersion directly on simple, air-exposed small molecule-based organic solar cells. Moreover, a deeper understanding of the percolation behavior of silver nanowire networks has been achieved. Herein, direct measurements of the basic network parameters, including the wire-to-wire junction resistance and the resistance of a single nanowire of pristine and annealed networks have been carried out for the first time. By putting the values into a simulation routine, a good accordance between measurement and simulation is achieved. Thus, an examination of the electrical limit of the nanowire system used in this work can be realized by extrapolating the junction resistance down to zero. The annealed silver nanowires are fairly close to the limit with a theoretical enhancement range of only 20 % (common absolute sheet resistance of approximately 10 Ohm/sq) such that a significant performance improvement is only expected by an enlargement of the nanowire length or by the implementation of new network geometries. In addition, carbon nanotube networks are investigated as alternative network-type, transparent bottom-electrode for organic small molecule solar cells. For that purpose, cleaning and structuring as well as planarization procedures are developed and optimized which maintain the optoelectronic performance of the carbon nanotube electrodes. Furthermore, a hybrid electrode consisting of silver nanowires covered with carbon nanotubes is fabricated yielding organic solar cells with only 0.47 % power conversion efficiency. In contrast, optimized electrodes comprising only carbon nanotubes show significantly higher efficiency. In comparison to identically prepared ITO devices, comparable or lower power conversion efficiencies of 3.96 % (in p-i-n stack), 4.83 % (in cascade cell) as well as 4.81 % (in p-n-i-p architecture) are demonstrated. For an inverted n-i-p stack design, the highest power conversion efficiency of 5.42 % is achieved.
2

Transparent Silver Nanowire Bottom Electrodes in Organic Solar Cells / Transparente Grundelektroden aus Silbernanodrähten in organischen Solarzellen

Bormann, Jan Ludwig 25 January 2017 (has links) (PDF)
Organic solar cells (OSCs) is an emerging photovoltaic technology that opens up new application areas where common inorganic techniques are not able to score. Some of those key features are flexibility, light weight, semitransparency, and low cost processing. The current industry-standard for the transparent electrode, indium tin oxide (ITO), cannot provide these properties because it is brittle and expensive. This thesis aims to investigate an alternative type of promising transparent electrode: silver nanowire (AgNW) networks. They exhibit similar or even better optical and electrical performance than ITO down to a sheet resistance of 12 Ohm/sq at 84% transmission (including the glass substrate). Furthermore, AgNWs are more flexible, solution-processable, and more cost-effective than ITO. However, two challenges occur during implementation as bottom electrode in OSCs. First, their inherently high roughness causes devices to shunt. Second, the AgNW network structure exhibits – in contrast to the continuous ITO – µm²-sized voids that have to be bridged electrically by the organic layers. In the first part of this thesis, solution-processed small molecule charge transport layers are investigated. In the case of hole transport layers (HTL), the host BF-DPB and the dopant NDP9 are investigated using tetrahydrofuran as a solvent. It is shown that BF-DPB is already doped by NDP9 in solution via the formation of a hybrid molecule complex. Solution-processed layers exhibit similar conductivities as compared to the reference deposition, which is thermal evaporation in high vacuum. The layers sufficiently smoothen the AgNW electrode such that DCV5T-Me:C60 organic solar cells with an efficiency up to 4.4% are obtained. Moreover, the influence of the square micrometer large network voids is investigated using HTLs of varying conductivity. As a result, a minimum conductivity of 1e−4 S/cm is needed to avoid macroscopic performance losses. Equivalent circuit simulations are performed to confirm these results. As a second planarization method, the AgNWs are buried in an insulating polymer that serves concurrently as flexible and ultrathin substrate. Out of three different polymers tested, the optical adhesive ’NOA63’ gives the best results. The roughness is strongly reduced from 30 nm down to (2 ± 1) nm. Two different OSC types are employed as testing devices with fully-flexible alumina encapsulation against moisture ingress. Maximum power conversion efficiencies of 5.0% and 5.6% are achieved with a fullerene-free cascade layer architecture and a DCV5T-Me:C60 OSC, respectively. To evaluate the applicability of these fully-flexible and encapsulated devices, degradation studies are performed under continuous illumination and a humid climate. Although employing the intrinsically stable DCV5T-Me:C60 stack design, within one day a fast degradation of the fully-flexible solar cells is observed. The degradation is attributed to AgNW electrode failure that results from photo-oxidation and -sulfurization, photo-migration, and electromigration. It is further shown that the cascade organic solar cell lacks intrinsic stability. In summary, efficient, fully-flexible, and encapsulated devices are shown. However, in terms of competitive OSCs, the low stability of AgNW electrodes is a challenge to be taken care of. In current research, this issue needs to be addressed more frequently. / Organische Solarzellen (OSZ) sind ein junges Forschungsgebiet der Photovoltaik, welches neue Anwendungsgebiete erschließt, für die herkömmliche anorganische Solarzellen nicht einsetzbar sind. Einige der Haupteigenschaften sind Flexibilität, niedriges Gewicht, Teiltransparenz und geringe Herstellungskosten. Indiumzinnoxid (ITO), der aktuelle Industriestandard transparenter Elektrodentechnologie, ist nicht in der Lage, diese Eigenschaften zu gewährleisten. Dies liegt vor allem an der Brüchigkeit von ITO und der begrenzten Verfügbarkeit von Indium, welche mit einem hohen Preis einhergeht. Das Ziel dieser Dissertation ist die Integration einer alternativen und vielversprechenden Elektrodentechnologie: Netzwerke aus Silbernanodrähten (AgNWs). Mit einem Schichtwiderstand von 12 Ohm/sq bei einer Transmission von 84% (inklusive Glassubstrat) besitzen sie ähnliche oder sogar bessere optische und elektrische Eigenschaften als ITO. Des Weiteren sind AgNW-Elektroden flexibler und kostengünstiger als ITO und aus flüssiger Phase prozessierbar. Es gibt allerdings zwei Herausforderungen, welche die Integration als Grundelektrode in OSZ erschweren. Zum einen sind AgNW-Netzwerke sehr rauh, sodass organische Bauteile kurzgeschlossen werden. Zum anderen weisen AgNW-Elektroden, im Gegensatz zu einer vollflächigen ITO-Schicht, Lücken zwischen den einzelnen Drähten auf. Diese Lücken müssen von den organischen Schichten der OSZ elektrisch überbrückt werden. Im ersten Teil der Arbeit werden daher flüssigprozessierte Ladungsträgertransportschichten aus kleinen Molekülen untersucht, welche die AgNW-Elektroden glätten und die verhältnismäßig großen Lücken füllen sollen. Im Falle von Lochleitschichten (HTL) wird BF-DPB als Matrix und NDP9 als Dotand in Tetrahydrofuran gelöst und zur Anwendung gebracht. BF-DPB wird dabei schon in Lösung von NDP9 dotiert, wobei sich ein Hybridmolekülkomplex ausbildet. Die Leitfähigkeit der entstehenden Schichten ist ähnlich zu Referenzschichten, die durch thermisches Verdampfen im Hochvakuum hergestellt wurden. Die erhaltenen HTLs glätten die AgNW-Elektroden, sodass DCV5T-Me:C60-Solarzellen mit einer Effizienz von maximal 4.4% hergestellt werden können. Weiterhin wird der Einfluss der quadratmikrometergroßen Löcher auf die makroskopische Effizienz der Solarzelle in Abhängigkeit der HTL Leitfähigkeit untersucht. Um signifikante Effizienzverluste zu verhindern, muss der HTL eine minimale Leitfähigkeit von etwa 1e−4 S/cm aufweisen. Simulationen eines Ersatzschaltkreises bestätigen hierbei die experimentellen Ergebnisse. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wird eine Planarisierungsmethode untersucht, in welcher die AgNWs in nichtleitfähigen Polymeren eingebettet werden. Diese Polymere fungieren anschließend als flexibles Substrat. Der optische Kleber ”NOA63” erzielt hierbei die besten Ergebnisse. Die Rauheit der AgNW-Elektroden wird von etwa 30 nm auf 1 bis 3 nm stark reduziert. Anschließend werden diese AgNW-Elektroden in zwei unterschiedlichen OSZ Konfigurationen getestet und mit einer vollflexiblen Schicht aus Aluminiumoxid gegen Wasserdampfpermeation verkapselt. Somit können maximale Effizienzen von 5% mithilfe einer organischen Kaskadenstruktur und 5.6% mit DCV5T-Me:C60 OSZ erreicht werden. Um die Anwendbarkeit dieser vollflexiblen und verkapselten OSZ zu bewerten, werden Alterungsstudien unter konstanter Beleuchtung und feuchtem Klima durchgeführt. Es wird gezeigt, dass die in das Polymer eingebettete AgNW-Elektrode aufgrund von Photooxidation und -schwefelung und Photo- und Elektromigration instabil ist. Dieser Sachverhalt ist für die Anwendung von AgNW-Elektroden in kommerziellen OSZ von großer Bedeutung und wurde in der Forschung bisher nicht ausreichend thematisiert.
3

Transparent Electrodes for Organic Solar Cells

Selzer, Franz 02 March 2016 (has links)
The aim of this work was to investigate silver nanowire as well as carbon nanotube networks as transparent conducting electrodes for small molecule organic solar cells. In the framework of the nanowire investigations, a low-temperature method at less than 80 °C is developed to obtain highly conductive networks directly after the deposition and without post-processing. In detail, specific non-conductive organic materials act as a matrix where the nanowires are embedded in such that a mutual attraction based on capillary forces and hydrophobic interaction is created. This process is mediated by the ethanol contained in the nanowire dispersion and works only for sublayer materials which exhibit hydrophobic and hydrophilic groups at the same time. In contrast to high-temperature processed reference electrodes (210 °C for 90 min) without matrix, a slightly lower sheet resistance of 10.8 Ohm/sq at a transparency of 80.4 % (including substrate) is obtained by using polyvinylpyrrolidone as the sublayer material. In comparison to annealed silver nanowire networks, the novel approach yields a performance enhancement in corresponding organic solar cells which can compete with ITO-based devices. Furthermore, a novel approach for scalable, highly conductive, and transparent silver nanowire top-electrodes for organic optoelectronic devices is introduced. By utilizing a perfluorinated methacrylate as stabilizer, silver nanowires with high aspect ratio can be transferred into inert solvents which do not dissolve most organic compounds making this modified dispersion compatible with small molecule and polymer-based organic optoelectronic devices. The inert silver nanowire dispersion yields highly performing top-electrodes with a sheet resistance of 10.0 Ohm/sq at 80.0 % transparency (including substrate) directly after low-temperature deposition at 30 °C and without further post-processing. In comparison to similarly prepared reference devices comprising a thin-metal film as transparent top-electrode, reasonable power conversion efficiencies are demonstrated by spray-coating this dispersion directly on simple, air-exposed small molecule-based organic solar cells. Moreover, a deeper understanding of the percolation behavior of silver nanowire networks has been achieved. Herein, direct measurements of the basic network parameters, including the wire-to-wire junction resistance and the resistance of a single nanowire of pristine and annealed networks have been carried out for the first time. By putting the values into a simulation routine, a good accordance between measurement and simulation is achieved. Thus, an examination of the electrical limit of the nanowire system used in this work can be realized by extrapolating the junction resistance down to zero. The annealed silver nanowires are fairly close to the limit with a theoretical enhancement range of only 20 % (common absolute sheet resistance of approximately 10 Ohm/sq) such that a significant performance improvement is only expected by an enlargement of the nanowire length or by the implementation of new network geometries. In addition, carbon nanotube networks are investigated as alternative network-type, transparent bottom-electrode for organic small molecule solar cells. For that purpose, cleaning and structuring as well as planarization procedures are developed and optimized which maintain the optoelectronic performance of the carbon nanotube electrodes. Furthermore, a hybrid electrode consisting of silver nanowires covered with carbon nanotubes is fabricated yielding organic solar cells with only 0.47 % power conversion efficiency. In contrast, optimized electrodes comprising only carbon nanotubes show significantly higher efficiency. In comparison to identically prepared ITO devices, comparable or lower power conversion efficiencies of 3.96 % (in p-i-n stack), 4.83 % (in cascade cell) as well as 4.81 % (in p-n-i-p architecture) are demonstrated. For an inverted n-i-p stack design, the highest power conversion efficiency of 5.42 % is achieved.
4

Transparent Silver Nanowire Bottom Electrodes in Organic Solar Cells

Bormann, Jan Ludwig 25 November 2016 (has links)
Organic solar cells (OSCs) is an emerging photovoltaic technology that opens up new application areas where common inorganic techniques are not able to score. Some of those key features are flexibility, light weight, semitransparency, and low cost processing. The current industry-standard for the transparent electrode, indium tin oxide (ITO), cannot provide these properties because it is brittle and expensive. This thesis aims to investigate an alternative type of promising transparent electrode: silver nanowire (AgNW) networks. They exhibit similar or even better optical and electrical performance than ITO down to a sheet resistance of 12 Ohm/sq at 84% transmission (including the glass substrate). Furthermore, AgNWs are more flexible, solution-processable, and more cost-effective than ITO. However, two challenges occur during implementation as bottom electrode in OSCs. First, their inherently high roughness causes devices to shunt. Second, the AgNW network structure exhibits – in contrast to the continuous ITO – µm²-sized voids that have to be bridged electrically by the organic layers. In the first part of this thesis, solution-processed small molecule charge transport layers are investigated. In the case of hole transport layers (HTL), the host BF-DPB and the dopant NDP9 are investigated using tetrahydrofuran as a solvent. It is shown that BF-DPB is already doped by NDP9 in solution via the formation of a hybrid molecule complex. Solution-processed layers exhibit similar conductivities as compared to the reference deposition, which is thermal evaporation in high vacuum. The layers sufficiently smoothen the AgNW electrode such that DCV5T-Me:C60 organic solar cells with an efficiency up to 4.4% are obtained. Moreover, the influence of the square micrometer large network voids is investigated using HTLs of varying conductivity. As a result, a minimum conductivity of 1e−4 S/cm is needed to avoid macroscopic performance losses. Equivalent circuit simulations are performed to confirm these results. As a second planarization method, the AgNWs are buried in an insulating polymer that serves concurrently as flexible and ultrathin substrate. Out of three different polymers tested, the optical adhesive ’NOA63’ gives the best results. The roughness is strongly reduced from 30 nm down to (2 ± 1) nm. Two different OSC types are employed as testing devices with fully-flexible alumina encapsulation against moisture ingress. Maximum power conversion efficiencies of 5.0% and 5.6% are achieved with a fullerene-free cascade layer architecture and a DCV5T-Me:C60 OSC, respectively. To evaluate the applicability of these fully-flexible and encapsulated devices, degradation studies are performed under continuous illumination and a humid climate. Although employing the intrinsically stable DCV5T-Me:C60 stack design, within one day a fast degradation of the fully-flexible solar cells is observed. The degradation is attributed to AgNW electrode failure that results from photo-oxidation and -sulfurization, photo-migration, and electromigration. It is further shown that the cascade organic solar cell lacks intrinsic stability. In summary, efficient, fully-flexible, and encapsulated devices are shown. However, in terms of competitive OSCs, the low stability of AgNW electrodes is a challenge to be taken care of. In current research, this issue needs to be addressed more frequently. / Organische Solarzellen (OSZ) sind ein junges Forschungsgebiet der Photovoltaik, welches neue Anwendungsgebiete erschließt, für die herkömmliche anorganische Solarzellen nicht einsetzbar sind. Einige der Haupteigenschaften sind Flexibilität, niedriges Gewicht, Teiltransparenz und geringe Herstellungskosten. Indiumzinnoxid (ITO), der aktuelle Industriestandard transparenter Elektrodentechnologie, ist nicht in der Lage, diese Eigenschaften zu gewährleisten. Dies liegt vor allem an der Brüchigkeit von ITO und der begrenzten Verfügbarkeit von Indium, welche mit einem hohen Preis einhergeht. Das Ziel dieser Dissertation ist die Integration einer alternativen und vielversprechenden Elektrodentechnologie: Netzwerke aus Silbernanodrähten (AgNWs). Mit einem Schichtwiderstand von 12 Ohm/sq bei einer Transmission von 84% (inklusive Glassubstrat) besitzen sie ähnliche oder sogar bessere optische und elektrische Eigenschaften als ITO. Des Weiteren sind AgNW-Elektroden flexibler und kostengünstiger als ITO und aus flüssiger Phase prozessierbar. Es gibt allerdings zwei Herausforderungen, welche die Integration als Grundelektrode in OSZ erschweren. Zum einen sind AgNW-Netzwerke sehr rauh, sodass organische Bauteile kurzgeschlossen werden. Zum anderen weisen AgNW-Elektroden, im Gegensatz zu einer vollflächigen ITO-Schicht, Lücken zwischen den einzelnen Drähten auf. Diese Lücken müssen von den organischen Schichten der OSZ elektrisch überbrückt werden. Im ersten Teil der Arbeit werden daher flüssigprozessierte Ladungsträgertransportschichten aus kleinen Molekülen untersucht, welche die AgNW-Elektroden glätten und die verhältnismäßig großen Lücken füllen sollen. Im Falle von Lochleitschichten (HTL) wird BF-DPB als Matrix und NDP9 als Dotand in Tetrahydrofuran gelöst und zur Anwendung gebracht. BF-DPB wird dabei schon in Lösung von NDP9 dotiert, wobei sich ein Hybridmolekülkomplex ausbildet. Die Leitfähigkeit der entstehenden Schichten ist ähnlich zu Referenzschichten, die durch thermisches Verdampfen im Hochvakuum hergestellt wurden. Die erhaltenen HTLs glätten die AgNW-Elektroden, sodass DCV5T-Me:C60-Solarzellen mit einer Effizienz von maximal 4.4% hergestellt werden können. Weiterhin wird der Einfluss der quadratmikrometergroßen Löcher auf die makroskopische Effizienz der Solarzelle in Abhängigkeit der HTL Leitfähigkeit untersucht. Um signifikante Effizienzverluste zu verhindern, muss der HTL eine minimale Leitfähigkeit von etwa 1e−4 S/cm aufweisen. Simulationen eines Ersatzschaltkreises bestätigen hierbei die experimentellen Ergebnisse. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wird eine Planarisierungsmethode untersucht, in welcher die AgNWs in nichtleitfähigen Polymeren eingebettet werden. Diese Polymere fungieren anschließend als flexibles Substrat. Der optische Kleber ”NOA63” erzielt hierbei die besten Ergebnisse. Die Rauheit der AgNW-Elektroden wird von etwa 30 nm auf 1 bis 3 nm stark reduziert. Anschließend werden diese AgNW-Elektroden in zwei unterschiedlichen OSZ Konfigurationen getestet und mit einer vollflexiblen Schicht aus Aluminiumoxid gegen Wasserdampfpermeation verkapselt. Somit können maximale Effizienzen von 5% mithilfe einer organischen Kaskadenstruktur und 5.6% mit DCV5T-Me:C60 OSZ erreicht werden. Um die Anwendbarkeit dieser vollflexiblen und verkapselten OSZ zu bewerten, werden Alterungsstudien unter konstanter Beleuchtung und feuchtem Klima durchgeführt. Es wird gezeigt, dass die in das Polymer eingebettete AgNW-Elektrode aufgrund von Photooxidation und -schwefelung und Photo- und Elektromigration instabil ist. Dieser Sachverhalt ist für die Anwendung von AgNW-Elektroden in kommerziellen OSZ von großer Bedeutung und wurde in der Forschung bisher nicht ausreichend thematisiert.

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