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Modélisation et simulation des réponses électriques de cellules solaires organiques / Modeling and simulation of electrical responses of organic solar cellsRaba, Adam 17 April 2015 (has links)
Le principal objectif de ce travail est d’étudier les cellules solaires organiques de type hétérojonction en volume à l’aide d’un modèle bidimensionnel spécifique incluant un état intermédiaire pour la dissociation des charges dans les matériaux organiques. Ce modèle est mis en place dans un logiciel de simulation par éléments finis. Après validation, il est comparé à deux approches existant dans la littérature. Le grand nombre de paramètres requis pour décrire le mécanisme complexe de génération de charges nécessite un algorithme robuste, basé sur l’exploitation de chaînes de Markov, pour extraire ces paramètres physiques à partir de données expérimentales. Le modèle ainsi que la procédure d’extraction de paramètres sont utilisés dans un premier temps pour étudier le mécanisme de dissociation associé à une cellule comportant une nouvelle molécule. Ensuite le comportement en température de cellules à base de P3HT : PCBM est simulé et comparé à des mesures expérimentales. / The main objective of this work is to study bulk heterojunction organic solar cells with a specific two dimensional model that takes into account an intermediate state specific to organic materials. The model is solved numerically by a finite element software. After its validation, it is compared to two existing approaches in the literature. The large number of parameters needed to describe the complex charge generation mechanism requires a robust parameter extraction algorithm, based on the operation of Markov chains, in order to extract these physical parameters from experimental characterizations. The model and the parameter extraction method are then used to study the charge dissociation mechanism of a cell with a newly synthesized molecule. Finally, the temperature evolution of P3HT : PCBM solar cells are simulated and compared to experimental measurements.
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Bulk heterojunction solar cells based on low band-gap copolymers and soluble fullerene derivatives / Cellules solaires de type hétérojonction en volume basées sur des copolymères à bande interdite étroite et sur des dérivés solubles du fullerèneIbraikulov, Olzhas 01 December 2016 (has links)
La structure chimique des semiconducteurs organiques utilisés dans les cellules photovoltaïques à base d’hétérojonction en volume peut fortement influencer les performances du dispositif final. Pour cette raison, une meilleure compréhension des relations structure-propriétés demeure cruciale pour l’amélioration des performances. Dans ce contexte, cette thèse fait état d'études approfondies du transport des charges, de la morphologie et des propriétés photovoltaïques sur de nouveaux copolymères à faible bande interdite. En premier lieu, l'impact de la position des chaînes alkyles sur les propriétés opto-électroniques et morphologiques a été étudié sur une famille de polymères. Les mesures du transport de charges ont montré que la planéité du squelette du copolymère influe sur l’évolution de la mobilité des charges avec la concentration de porteurs libres. Ce comportement suggère que le désordre énergétique électronique est fortement impacté par les angles de torsion intramoléculaire le long de la chaîne conjuguée. Un second copolymère à base d'unités accepteur de [2,1,3] thiadiazole pyridique, dont les niveaux d’énergie des orbitales frontières sont optimales pour l’application photovoltaïque, a ensuite été étudié. Les performances obtenues en cellule photovoltaïque sont très inférieures aux attentes. Des analyses de la morphologie et du transport de charge ont révélé que l’orientation des lamelles cristallines est défavorable au transport perpendiculaire au film organique et empêche ainsi une bonne extraction des charges photo-générées. Enfin, les propriétés opto-électroniques et photovoltaïques de copolymères fluorés ont été étudiées. Dans ce cas, les atomes de fluor favorisent la formation de lamelles orientées favorablement pour le transport. Ces bonnes propriétés nous ont permis d'atteindre un rendement de conversion de puissance de 9,8% avec une simple hétérojonction polymère:fullerène. / The chemical structure of organic semiconductors that are utilized in bulk heterojunction photovoltaic cells may strongly influence the final device performances. Thus, better understanding the structure-property relationships still remains a major task towards high efficiency. Within this framework, this thesis reports in-depth material investigations including charge transport, morphology and photovoltaic studies on various novel low band-gap copolymers. First, the impact of alkyl side chains on the opto-electronic and morphological properties has been studied on a series of polymers. Detailed charge transport investigations showed that a planar conjugated polymer backbone leads to a weak dependence of the charge carrier mobility on the carrier concentration. This observation points out that the intra-molecular torsion angle contributes significantly to the electronic energy disorder. Solar cells using another novel copolymer based on pyridal[2,1,3]thiadiazole acceptor unit have been studied in detail next. Despite the almost ideal frontier molecular orbital energy levels, this copolymer did not perform in solar cells as good as expected. A combined investigation of the thin film microstructure and transport properties showed that the polymers self-assemble into a lamellar structure with polymer chains being oriented preferentially “edge-on”, thus hindering the out-of-plane hole transport and leading to poor charge extraction. Finally, the impact of fluorine atoms in fluorinated polymers on the opto-electronic and photovoltaic properties has been investigated. In this case, the presence of both flat-lying and standing lamellae enabled efficient charge transport in all three directions. As a consequence, good charge extraction was possible and allowed us to achieve a maximum power conversion efficiency of 9.8%.
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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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The impact on the morphology of the active layer from an organic solar cell by using different solvents / Inverkan av olika lösningsmedel på morfologin hos en organisk solcells aktiva lagerSchelfhout, Robbert January 2017 (has links)
The rise in the world population can be correlated with an increase in energy need. Fossil fuels are not going to able to cover this need in energy because not only are they limited, they also have a negative effect on the environment. A reason the more to switch renewable energy. One of the most popular renewable energy source is solar energy. The organic solar cell could be a low-cost, light-weight and flexible option for photovoltaics. This thesis will discuss the morphology of the active layer of an organic solar cell. The polymer poly(9,9-dioctylfluorenyl-2,7-diyl) and the fullerene derivate [6,6]-phenyl C61-butyric acid methyl ester were used as model components for the active layer. These two components were processed in different solvents, different ratios, different total concentrations and were either dip- or spin-coated on glass substrates. These samples were analyzed with atomic force microscopy, steady state and time resolved fluorescence and UV/Vis spectroscopy. The analysis show that the morphology of the films processed in chloroform and tetrahydrofuran would react very similar in α-phase and β-phase by dip- and spin-coated samples. Xylene would react the opposite as tetrahydrofuran and chloroform while ethylbenzene would react little with different samples. / De stijging in wereldpopulatie kan gelinkt worden met een stijging in energieverbruik. Het is niet aan te raden om fossiele brandstoffen te gebruiken voor deze energiestijging want niet alleen zijn ze beperkt aanwezig op aarde ook zijn ze niet goed voor het milieu. Een reden te meer om naar duurzame energie over te schakelen. Één van de meeste populaire energiebronnen is zonne-energie. Hierbij zou de organische zonnecel een goedkope, lichte en flexibele optie zijn. Deze thesis zal de morfologie van de actieve laag van een zonnecel bespreken. Het polymeer poly(9,9-dioctylfluorenyl-2,7-diyl) en het fullereen derivaat [6,6]-fenyl C61-butylzuur waren de twee model componenten voor de actieve laag. Deze twee componenten werden in verschillende oplosmiddelen, verschillende verhoudingen en verschillende totaal concentraties bereidt en werden vervolgens gedipcoated of gespincoated op glazen substraten. De stalen werden vervolgens geanalyseerd door atomic force microscopy, steady state en time resolved fluorescence en UV/Vis spectroscopy. De analyse toont dat de morfologie van de films bereidt in chloroform en tetrahydrofuraan gelijkaardig reageren in α- fase en β-fase bij gedipt- en gespincoaten stalen. Terwijl xyleen net omgekeerd reageert als chloroform en tetrahydrofuraan. Bij ethylbenzeen zou de fases maar heel weinig veranderen bij de verschillende stalen.
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Exploring nanoscale properties of organic solar cellsMönch, Tobias 30 November 2015 (has links) (PDF)
The demand for electrical energy is steadily increasing. Highly efficient organic solar cells based on mixed, strongly absorbing organic molecules convert sunlight into electricity and, thus, have the potential to contribute to the worlds energy production. The continuous development of new materials during the last decades lead to a swift increase of power conversion efficiencies (PCE) of organic solar cells, recently reaching 12%.
Despite these breakthroughs, the usage of highly complex organic molecules blended together to form a self-organised absorber layer results in complicated morphologies that are poorly understood. However, the morphology has a tremendous impact on the photon-to-electron conversion, affecting all processes ranging from light absorption to charge carrier extraction.
This dissertation studies the role of phase-separation of the self-organised thin film blend layers utilized in organic solar cells. On the molecular scale, we manipulate the phase-separation, using different molecule combinations ranging from the well-known ZnPc:C 60 blend layers to highly efficient oligothiophene:C60 blend layers. On the macroscopic scale, we shape the morphology by depositing the aforementioned blend layers on differently heated substrates (in-vacuo substrate temperature, Tsub).
To characterise the manufactured blend layers, we utilize high resolution microscopy techniques such as photoconductive atomic force microscopy, different electron microscopic techniques, X-ray microscopy etc., and various established and newly developed computational simulations to rationalise the experimental findings. This multi-technique, multi-scale approach fulfils the demands of several scientific articles to analyse a wide range of length scales to understand the underlying optoelectronic processes.
Varying the mixing ratio of a ZnPc:C60 blend layer from 2:1 to 6:1 at fixed in vacuo substrate temperature results in a continuous increase of surface roughness, decrease of short-circuit current, and decrease of crystallinity. Additionally performed density functional theory calculations and 3D drift-diffusion simulations explain the observed crystalline ZnPc nanorod formation by the presence of C60 in the bulk volume and the in turn lowered recombination at crystalline ZnPc nanorods. Moving to oligothiophene:C60 blend layers used in highly efficient organic solar cells deposited at elevated substrate temperatures, we find an increase of phase-separation, surface roughness, decrease of oligothiophene-C60 contacts, and reduced disorder upon increasing Tsub from RT (PCE=4.5%) to 80 °C (PCE=6.8%). At Tsub =140 °C, we observe the formation of micrometer-sized aggregates on the surface resulting in inhomogeneous light absorption and charge carrier extraction, which in turn massively lowers the power conversion efficiency to 1.9%. Subtly changing the molecular structure of the oligothiophene molecule by attaching two additional methyl side chains affects the thin film growth, which is also dependent on the substrate type.
In conclusion, the utilized highly sensitive characterisation methods are suitable to study the impact of the morphology on the device performance of all kinds of organic electronic devices, as we demonstrate for organic blend layers. At the prototypical ZnPc:C60 blend, we discovered a way to grow ZnPc nanorods from the blend layer. These nanorods are highly crystalline and facilitate a lowered charge carrier recombination which is highly desirable in organic solar cells.
The obtained results at oligothiophene: C60 blends clearly demonstrate the universality of the multi-technique approach for an in-depth understanding of the fragile interplay between phase-separation and phase-connectivity in efficient organic solar cells. Overall, we can conclude that both molecular structure and external processing parameters affect the morphology in manifold ways and, thus, need to be considered already at the synthesis of new materials.
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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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Design And Synthesis Of Donor-Acceptor (D-A) Organic Semiconductors : Applications In Field Effect Transistors And PhotovoltaicsDutta, Gitish Kishor 06 1900 (has links) (PDF)
The present thesis is focused on rational design and synthesis of π-conjugated donor-acceptor (D-A) type oligomers and polymers. It is organized in six different chapters and a brief discussion on the content of the individual chapter is provided below.
Chapter 1 briefly describes the charge transport properties of organic semiconductors followed by recent development of different organic semiconducting materials mainly for applications in OFET and solar cells have been highlighted.
Chapter 2 explores the synthesis and characterization of two new liquid crystalline, D-A type bithiophene-benzothiazole derivatives. The liquid crystalline properties of the materials have been studied in detail with optical polarizing microscopic images and differential scanning calorimetry and found that these materials possess highly ordered smectic A liquid crystalline phase. Their charge transport properties have also been investigated by fabricating OFET devices.
Chapter 3 describes the photophysical properties and OFET performance of quinoxaline based donors-acceptor-donor (D-A-D) type molecules. Depending on the flexibility and rigidity of the conjugated backbone these materials show liquid crystalline behaviour. Investigation of their OFET performance indicated that these molecules exhibit p-type mobility up to 9.7 x 10-4 cm2V-1s-1 and on/ off ratio of 104.
Chapter 4 investigates excited state properties and OFET behavior of D-A-D type diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP) derivatives end-capped with alkoxynaphthalene group. UV-Visible spectroscopy measurement shows strong intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) between donor and acceptor unit. Steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence measurements confirm the formation of excimer. The excited state interactions, the interchromophore separation and geometry of the molecules influence the extent of excimer formation. Finally, the OFET behavior of these DPP based materials has been studied using different dielectric layers.
Chapter 5 discusses the synthesis, characterization and properties of two new thieno[3,2-b]thiophene-DPP based donor-acceptor (D-A) type low band gap polymers (PTTDPP-BDT and PTTDPP-BZT). Investigation of OFET performance indicated that polymers exhibited ambipolar behaviour with hole mobility upto 1.0 x 10-3 cm2/Vs and electron mobility upto 8 x 10-5 cm2/Vs. Using polymer PTTDPP-BDT with electron acceptor C70PCBM, power conversion efficiency (PCE) around 3.26% in bulk heterojunction solar cell has been achieved.
Chapter 6 describes the approach to tailor the energy levels of conjugated polymers (PTDPP-IDT and PTTDPP-IDT) based on Indacenodithiophene (IDT) coupled with DPP moieties. We have studied the photovoltaic performance of these conjugated polymers by blending with PCBM and P3HT. The importance of these materials in polymer/polymer blend solar cell has been emphasized. The photovoltaic devices with polymer/polymer blend solar cell exhibit high open-circuit voltages (VOC) of ~ 0.8 V.
In summary, the work presented in this thesis describes synthesis, characterization and photophysical properties of new organic semiconductors and their importance in optoelectronic devices. This work also describes a general design principle of nonfullerene organic solar cell. The results described here show that these materials have potential application as active components in plastic electronics.
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Light enhancements in nano-structured solar cellsPastorelli, Francesco 09 December 2013 (has links)
La rareté grandissante des ressources en énergie associée à une augmentation de la pollution font partie des enjeux plus importants de ce siècle. Cette thèse décrira brièvement ces deux problématiques et proposera un plan d’action combinant économie d’énergie et diversité des sources d’énergies renouvelables. Parmi les formes d’énergies renouvelables disponibles, l’énergie solaire est la plus abondante. Pour faire de l’énergie solaire une ressource plus durable et plus rentable économiquement, nous proposons d’amplifier les propriétés optiques de cellules solaires en couches minces. Dans cette catégorie, les cellules solaires organiques représentent un choix pertinent de part la faible quantité de matériau nécessaire ainsi que la faible énergie nécessaire au procédé de fabrication. Cette technologie peut être légère, transparente et flexible de sorte qu’elle peut être utilisée dans différentes solutions. Suivra la théorie sous-jacente à ces dispositifs et l’explication de la manière dont leurs performances sont améliorées. Nous présenterons quelques exemples où l’on collecte la radiation solaire avec une antenne optique. Ainsi, nous faisons la toute première démonstration d’une antenne auto-assemblée qui couple efficacement la lumière dans le matériau constituant la couche mince que nous utilisons. Finalement, nous développons le concept de cellules photovoltaïques intégrées en présentant différents cas de façades solaires. Ces travaux nous ont permis de concevoir et de fabriquer une cellule solaire organique transparente avec une transparence dans le visible de 20% et une efficacité de conversion photon-électron améliorée. / In this century some of our main issues are energy shortage and pollution. This work will briefly describe these problems, proposing a plan of action combining energy saving and different sustainable energy sources. Within different types of renewable energy sources, solar energy is the most abundant one. To make solar energy a more sustainable and cost effective technology we focus on enhancing the optical characteristics of thin film solar cells. In this category, organic solar cells are good options for their exiguous amount of material and the low energy needed for the fabrication process. This technology can be lightweight, transparent, flexible and conformal in order to be applied to and integrated in various architectural solutions and consumer electronics. After a study of the physics of such devices and on how to optically enhance their performances, we will show some examples where we theoretically and experimentally collect the solar radiation with optical antennas. We report, for the first time in literature, a nanogap antenna that efficiently couples the light in our active material thin film. Finally, we elaborate on the concept of building integrated photovoltaics introducing some examples of solar façades. Based on our research, we are able to design and fabricate an organic transparent solar cell with a visible transparency above 20% and an optically enhanced photon – electron conversion efficiency remarkably similar to its opaque equivalent.
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Synthèse de (co)polymères à base de Poly(3-hexylthiophène) pour le photovoltaïque organiqueNicolet, Célia 12 December 2011 (has links)
L’optimisation de la morphologie de la couche active est primordiale pour l’augmentation des rendements des cellules solaires photovoltaïques organiques. Nous avons montré l’influence du ratio de matériaux donneur (P3HT) et accepteur (PCBM) d’électrons ainsi que de la masse molaire du P3HT sur la morphologie de la couche active. Afin de contrôler la séparation de phases entre les matériaux donneur et accepteur d’électrons, il est possible d’utiliser des copolymères à blocs afin d’aider la compatibilisation entre le P3HT et le PCBM. Nous avons choisi de synthétiser des copolymères à blocs P3HT-b-polystyrène et des P3HT-b-polyisoprène présentant une certaine compatibilité avec les matériaux de la partie active. L’ajout optimisé de P3HT-b-polyisoprène permet une augmentation de 30% des rendements et de 90% de durée de vie des cellules solaires. / Active layer morphology optimization is fundamental to achieve high efficiency in organic photovoltaic solar cells. We showed the influence of the donor (P3HT) and acceptor (PCBM) material ratio and the impact of the P3HT molecular weight on the active layer morphology. We demonstrated the possibility of using well-designed block copolymers to help P3HT and PCBM compatibilization and to control their phase separation. We chose to synthesize P3HT-b-polystyrene and P3HT-b-polyisoprene for which each block is compatible with the active materials. Optimal addition of P3HT-b-polyisoprene enables to get a 30%-improved efficiency and a 90%-enhanced lifetime of the solar cells.
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Modeling of charge transport processes in supra-molecular architectures and at organic-organic interfaces / Modélisation des processus de transport dans les architectures supramoléculaires et les interfaces organiquesIde, Julien 28 November 2011 (has links)
L’optimisation de cellules solaires organiques repose sur l’amélioration de différents paramètres électroniques et structuraux. En particulier, les processus de séparation et de transport de charge doivent être optimisés pour obtenir des rendements élevés. Les processus de séparation de charge dans ces dispositifs s’effectuent aux interfaces donneur/accepteur suite à un décalage entre les niveaux électroniques de ces deux matériaux. Suivant leur nature, des interactions aux interfaces peuvent conduire à l’apparition d’un dipôle pouvant favoriser ou défavoriser la génération de charges libres ; toutefois, l’origine de ce dipôle d’interface est très mal connue. Ainsi, la première partie de cette thèse s’est attaché à une meilleure compréhension de l’origine de ce dipôle en appliquant une approche théorique multi-échelle sur un système D/A typique : l’interface pentacène/C60. L’amélioration des cellules solaires organiques repose également sur l’augmentation des longueurs de diffusion d’exciton et de la mobilité des porteurs de charge dans les couches actives. Ainsi, l’extension de l’ordre structural au sein d’une hétérojonction constituée de deux cristaux liquides colonnaires électroniquement complémentaires pourrait aider à améliorer ces paramètres. En deuxième partie, nous avons donc analysé l’impact du désordre structural présent au sein d’un auto-assemblage monodimensionnel de perylène diimide sur les paramètres électroniques gouvernant le transport de charge en couplant des calculs de dynamique moléculaire à des calculs de chimie quantique. Les mobilités des porteurs de charge ont été estimées en simulant des mesures de mobilité en temps de vol calculées dans le cadre du formalisme de Marcus puis comparées à l’expérience. Des résultats préliminaires issus de simulations de dynamique moléculaire sur une hétérojonction entre deux cristaux liquides électroniquement complémentaire récemment synthétisés ont été reportés en dernière partie. / The development of efficient organic solar cells relies on the optimization of different correlated electronic and structural parameters. In particular, efficient charge separation and charge transport processes are essential to get high conversion yields. The charge separation processes in these devices occur at the donor/acceptor interfaces due to the energetic mismatch between the electronic structures of the two materials. Depending on the nature of these materials, interfacial interactions may lead to the appearance of a significant dipole that can help or disadvantage the generation of free charges. However, the origin of this interface dipole is still unclear. Thus, the first part of this thesis presents a multiscale theoretical approach to address the origin of the interface dipole at a prototypical D/A interface: the pentacene/C60 interface. Improving of the conversion efficiency of organic solar cells also relies on the increase of both the exciton diffusion length and of the charge carrier mobilities. For this purpose, a possible route is to expand the structural order inside the heterojunction via the self-organization of two electronically complementary columnar liquid crystals. This point is investigated in the second part of this thesis. First, we address the impact of the structural disorder on the electronic parameters mediating the charge transport properties in a one-dimensional self-assembly of perylene diimides by coupling molecular dynamics simulations to quantum-chemical calculations. The charge carrier mobilities are evaluated by means of time-of-flight numerical simulations in the framework of the Marcus formalism and compared to the experience. Then, we present preliminary results issued from atomistic molecular dynamics simulations on the heterojunction between two recently synthesized electronically complementary discotic liquid crystals.
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