@article{YuanZhangQiuetal.2022, author = {Yuan, Jun and Zhang, Chujun and Qiu, Beibei and Liu, Wei and So, Shu Kong and Mainville, Mathieu and Leclerc, Mario and Shoaee, Safa and Neher, Dieter and Zou, Yingping}, title = {Effects of energetic disorder in bulk heterojunction organic solar cells}, series = {Energy \& environmental science}, volume = {15}, journal = {Energy \& environmental science}, number = {7}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, address = {Cambridge}, issn = {1754-5692}, doi = {10.1039/d2ee00271j}, pages = {2806 -- 2818}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Organic solar cells (OSCs) have progressed rapidly in recent years through the development of novel organic photoactive materials, especially non-fullerene acceptors (NFAs). Consequently, OSCs based on state-of-the-art NFAs have reached significant milestones, such as similar to 19\% power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) and small energy losses (less than 0.5 eV). Despite these significant advances, understanding of the interplay between molecular structure and optoelectronic properties lags significantly behind. For example, despite the theoretical framework for describing the energetic disorder being well developed for the case of inorganic semiconductors, the question of the applicability of classical semiconductor theories in analyzing organic semiconductors is still under debate. A general observation in the inorganic field is that inorganic photovoltaic materials possessing a polycrystalline microstructure exhibit suppressed disorder properties and better charge carrier transport compared to their amorphous analogs. Accordingly, this principle extends to the organic semiconductor field as many organic photovoltaic materials are synthesized to pursue polycrystalline-like features. Yet, there appears to be sporadic examples that exhibit an opposite trend. However, full studies decoupling energetic disorder from aggregation effects have largely been left out. Hence, the potential role of the energetic disorder in OSCs has received little attention. Interestingly, recently reported state-of-the-art NFA-based devices could achieve a small energetic disorder and high PCE at the same time; and interest in this investigation related to the disorder properties in OSCs was revived. In this contribution, progress in terms of the correlation between molecular design and energetic disorder is reviewed together with their effects on the optoelectronic mechanism and photovoltaic performance. Finally, the specific challenges and possible solutions in reducing the energetic disorder of OSCs from the viewpoint of materials and devices are proposed.}, language = {en} } @article{KrohEllerSchoetzetal.2022, author = {Kroh, Daniel and Eller, Fabian and Sch{\"o}tz, Konstantin and Wedler, Stefan and Perdig{\´o}n-Toro, Lorena and Freychet, Guillaume and Wei, Qingya and D{\"o}rr, Maximilian and Jones, David and Zou, Yingping and Herzig, Eva M. and Neher, Dieter and K{\"o}hler, Anna}, title = {Identifying the signatures of intermolecular interactions in blends of PM6 with Y6 and N4 using absorption spectroscopy}, series = {Advanced functional materials}, volume = {32}, journal = {Advanced functional materials}, number = {44}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1616-301X}, doi = {10.1002/adfm.202205711}, pages = {14}, year = {2022}, abstract = {In organic solar cells, the resulting device efficiency depends strongly on the local morphology and intermolecular interactions of the blend film. Optical spectroscopy was used to identify the spectral signatures of interacting chromophores in blend films of the donor polymer PM6 with two state-of-the-art nonfullerene acceptors, Y6 and N4, which differ merely in the branching point of the side chain. From temperature-dependent absorption and luminescence spectroscopy in solution, it is inferred that both acceptor materials form two types of aggregates that differ in their interaction energy. Y6 forms an aggregate with a predominant J-type character in solution, while for N4 molecules the interaction is predominantly in a H-like manner in solution and freshly spin-cast film, yet the molecules reorient with respect to each other with time or thermal annealing to adopt a more J-type interaction. The different aggregation behavior of the acceptor materials is also reflected in the blend films and accounts for the different solar cell efficiencies reported with the two blends.}, language = {en} } @misc{YeZhangWarbyetal.2022, author = {Ye, Fangyuan and Zhang, Shuo and Warby, Jonathan and Wu, Jiawei and Gutierrez-Partida, Emilio and Lang, Felix and Shah, Sahil and Saglamkaya, Elifnaz and Sun, Bowen and Zu, Fengshuo and Shoaee, Safa and Wang, Haifeng and Stiller, Burkhard and Neher, Dieter and Zhu, Wei-Hong and Stolterfoht, Martin and Wu, Yongzhen}, title = {Overcoming C₆₀-induced interfacial recombination in inverted perovskite solar cells by electron-transporting carborane}, series = {Zweitver{\"o}ffentlichungen der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Zweitver{\"o}ffentlichungen der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, number = {1317}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-58770}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-587705}, pages = {12}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Inverted perovskite solar cells still suffer from significant non-radiative recombination losses at the perovskite surface and across the perovskite/C₆₀ interface, limiting the future development of perovskite-based single- and multi-junction photovoltaics. Therefore, more effective inter- or transport layers are urgently required. To tackle these recombination losses, we introduce ortho-carborane as an interlayer material that has a spherical molecular structure and a three-dimensional aromaticity. Based on a variety of experimental techniques, we show that ortho-carborane decorated with phenylamino groups effectively passivates the perovskite surface and essentially eliminates the non-radiative recombination loss across the perovskite/C₆₀ interface with high thermal stability. We further demonstrate the potential of carborane as an electron transport material, facilitating electron extraction while blocking holes from the interface. The resulting inverted perovskite solar cells deliver a power conversion efficiency of over 23\% with a low non-radiative voltage loss of 110 mV, and retain >97\% of the initial efficiency after 400 h of maximum power point tracking. Overall, the designed carborane based interlayer simultaneously enables passivation, electron-transport and hole-blocking and paves the way toward more efficient and stable perovskite solar cells.}, language = {en} } @article{PoelkingBenduhnSpoltoreetal.2022, author = {Poelking, Carl and Benduhn, Johannes and Spoltore, Donato and Schwarze, Martin and Roland, Steffen and Piersimoni, Fortunato and Neher, Dieter and Leo, Karl and Vandewal, Koen and Andrienko, Denis}, title = {Open-circuit voltage of organic solar cells}, series = {Communications physics}, volume = {5}, journal = {Communications physics}, number = {1}, publisher = {Nature portfolio}, address = {Berlin}, issn = {2399-3650}, doi = {10.1038/s42005-022-01084-x}, pages = {7}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Organic photovoltaics (PV) is an energy-harvesting technology that offers many advantages, such as flexibility, low weight and cost, as well as environmentally benign materials and manufacturing techniques. Despite growth of power conversion efficiencies to around 19 \% in the last years, organic PVs still lag behind inorganic PV technologies, mainly due to high losses in open-circuit voltage. Understanding and improving open circuit voltage in organic solar cells is challenging, as it is controlled by the properties of a donor-acceptor interface where the optical excitations are separated into charge carriers. Here, we provide an electrostatic model of a rough donor-acceptor interface and test it experimentally on small molecule PV materials systems. The model provides concise relationships between the open-circuit voltage, photovoltaic gap, charge-transfer state energy, and interfacial morphology. In particular, we show that the electrostatic bias generated across the interface reduces the photovoltaic gap. This negative influence on open-circuit voltage can, however, be circumvented by adjusting the morphology of the donor-acceptor interface. Organic solar cells, despite their high power conversion efficiencies, suffer from open circuit voltage losses making them less appealing in terms of applications. Here, the authors, supported with experimental data on small molecule photovoltaic cells, relate open circuit voltage to photovoltaic gap, charge-transfer state energy, and donor-acceptor interfacial morphology.}, language = {en} } @article{GrischekCaprioglioZhangetal.2022, author = {Grischek, Max and Caprioglio, Pietro and Zhang, Jiahuan and Pena-Camargo, Francisco and Sveinbjornsson, Kari and Zu, Fengshuo and Menzel, Dorothee and Warby, Jonathan H. and Li, Jinzhao and Koch, Norbert and Unger, Eva and Korte, Lars and Neher, Dieter and Stolterfoht, Martin and Albrecht, Steve}, title = {Efficiency Potential and Voltage Loss of Inorganic CsPbI2Br Perovskite Solar Cells}, series = {Solar RRL}, volume = {6}, journal = {Solar RRL}, number = {11}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {2367-198X}, doi = {10.1002/solr.202200690}, pages = {12}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Inorganic perovskite solar cells show excellent thermal stability, but the reported power conversion efficiencies are still lower than for organic-inorganic perovskites. This is mainly caused by lower open-circuit voltages (V(OC)s). Herein, the reasons for the low V-OC in inorganic CsPbI2Br perovskite solar cells are investigated. Intensity-dependent photoluminescence measurements for different layer stacks reveal that n-i-p and p-i-n CsPbI2Br solar cells exhibit a strong mismatch between quasi-Fermi level splitting (QFLS) and V-OC. Specifically, the CsPbI2Br p-i-n perovskite solar cell has a QFLS-e center dot V-OC mismatch of 179 meV, compared with 11 meV for a reference cell with an organic-inorganic perovskite of similar bandgap. On the other hand, this study shows that the CsPbI2Br films with a bandgap of 1.9 eV have a very low defect density, resulting in an efficiency potential of 20.3\% with a MeO-2PACz hole-transporting layer and 20.8\% on compact TiO2. Using ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy measurements, energy level misalignment is identified as a possible reason for the QFLS-e center dot V-OC mismatch and strategies for overcoming this V-OC limitation are discussed. This work highlights the need to control the interfacial energetics in inorganic perovskite solar cells, but also gives promise for high efficiencies once this issue is resolved.}, language = {en} } @article{PenaCamargoThiesbrummelHempeletal.2022, author = {Pena-Camargo, Francisco and Thiesbrummel, Jarla and Hempel, Hannes and Musiienko, Artem and Le Corre, Vincent M. and Diekmann, Jonas and Warby, Jonathan and Unold, Thomas and Lang, Felix and Neher, Dieter and Stolterfoht, Martin}, title = {Revealing the doping density in perovskite solar cells and its impact on device performance}, series = {Applied physics reviews}, volume = {9}, journal = {Applied physics reviews}, number = {2}, publisher = {AIP Publishing}, address = {Melville}, issn = {1931-9401}, doi = {10.1063/5.0085286}, pages = {11}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Traditional inorganic semiconductors can be electronically doped with high precision. Conversely, there is still conjecture regarding the assessment of the electronic doping density in metal-halide perovskites, not to mention of a control thereof. This paper presents a multifaceted approach to determine the electronic doping density for a range of different lead-halide perovskite systems. Optical and electrical characterization techniques, comprising intensity-dependent and transient photoluminescence, AC Hall effect, transfer-length-methods, and charge extraction measurements were instrumental in quantifying an upper limit for the doping density. The obtained values are subsequently compared to the electrode charge per cell volume under short-circuit conditions ( CUbi/eV), which amounts to roughly 10(16) cm(-3). This figure of merit represents the critical limit below which doping-induced charges do not influence the device performance. The experimental results consistently demonstrate that the doping density is below this critical threshold 10(12) cm(-3), which means << CUbi / e V) for all common lead-based metal-halide perovskites. Nevertheless, although the density of doping-induced charges is too low to redistribute the built-in voltage in the perovskite active layer, mobile ions are present in sufficient quantities to create space-charge-regions in the active layer, reminiscent of doped pn-junctions. These results are well supported by drift-diffusion simulations, which confirm that the device performance is not affected by such low doping densities.}, language = {en} } @article{FritschKurpiersRolandetal.2022, author = {Fritsch, Tobias and Kurpiers, Jona and Roland, Steffen and Tokmoldin, Nurlan and Shoaee, Safa and Ferron, Thomas and Collins, Brian A. and Janietz, Silvia and Vandewal, Koen and Neher, Dieter}, title = {On the interplay between CT and singlet exciton emission in organic solar cells with small driving force and its impact on voltage loss}, series = {Advanced energy materials}, volume = {12}, journal = {Advanced energy materials}, number = {31}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1614-6832}, doi = {10.1002/aenm.202200641}, pages = {11}, year = {2022}, abstract = {The interplay between free charge carriers, charge transfer (CT) states and singlet excitons (S-1) determines the recombination pathway and the resulting open circuit voltage (V-OC) of organic solar cells. By combining a well-aggregated low bandgap polymer with different blend ratios of the fullerenes PCBM and ICBA, the energy of the CT state (E-CT) is varied by 130 meV while leaving the S-1 energy of the polymer (ES1\[{E_{{{\rm{S}}_1}}}\]) unaffected. It is found that the polymer exciton dominates the radiative properties of the blend when ECT\[{E_{{\rm{CT}}}}\] approaches ES1\[{E_{{{\rm{S}}_1}}}\], while the V-OC remains limited by the non-radiative decay of the CT state. It is concluded that an increasing strength of the exciton in the optical spectra of organic solar cells will generally decrease the non-radiative voltage loss because it lowers the radiative V-OC limit (V-OC,V-rad), but not because it is more emissive. The analysis further suggests that electronic coupling between the CT state and the S-1 will not improve the V-OC, but rather reduce the V-OC,V-rad. It is anticipated that only at very low CT state absorption combined with a fairly high CT radiative efficiency the solar cell benefit from the radiative properties of the singlet excitons.}, language = {en} } @article{LeCorreDiekmannPenaCamargoetal.2022, author = {Le Corre, Vincent M. and Diekmann, Jonas and Pe{\~n}a-Camargo, Francisco and Thiesbrummel, Jarla and Tokmoldin, Nurlan and Gutierrez-Partida, Emilio and Peters, Karol Pawel and Perdig{\´o}n-Toro, Lorena and Futscher, Moritz H. and Lang, Felix and Warby, Jonathan and Snaith, Henry J. and Neher, Dieter and Stolterfoht, Martin}, title = {Quantification of efficiency losses due to mobile ions in Perovskite solar cells via fast hysteresis measurements}, series = {Solar RRL}, volume = {6}, journal = {Solar RRL}, number = {4}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {2367-198X}, doi = {10.1002/solr.202100772}, pages = {10}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Perovskite semiconductors differ from most inorganic and organic semiconductors due to the presence of mobile ions in the material. Although the phenomenon is intensively investigated, important questions such as the exact impact of the mobile ions on the steady-state power conversion efficiency (PCE) and stability remain. Herein, a simple method is proposed to estimate the efficiency loss due to mobile ions via "fast-hysteresis" measurements by preventing the perturbation of mobile ions out of their equilibrium position at fast scan speeds (approximate to 1000 V s(-1)). The "ion-free" PCE is between 1\% and 3\% higher than the steady-state PCE, demonstrating the importance of ion-induced losses, even in cells with low levels of hysteresis at typical scan speeds (approximate to 100mv s(-1)). The hysteresis over many orders of magnitude in scan speed provides important information on the effective ion diffusion constant from the peak hysteresis position. The fast-hysteresis measurements are corroborated by transient charge extraction and capacitance measurements and numerical simulations, which confirm the experimental findings and provide important insights into the charge carrier dynamics. The proposed method to quantify PCE losses due to field screening induced by mobile ions clarifies several important experimental observations and opens up a large range of future experiments.}, language = {en} } @article{VollbrechtTokmoldinSunetal.2022, author = {Vollbrecht, Joachim and Tokmoldin, Nurlan and Sun, Bowen and Brus, Viktor V. and Shoaee, Safa and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Determination of the charge carrier density in organic solar cells}, series = {Journal of applied physics}, volume = {131}, journal = {Journal of applied physics}, number = {22}, publisher = {American Institute of Physics}, address = {Melville, NY}, issn = {0021-8979}, doi = {10.1063/5.0094955}, pages = {18}, year = {2022}, abstract = {The increase in the performance of organic solar cells observed over the past few years has reinvigorated the search for a deeper understanding of the loss and extraction processes in this class of device. A detailed knowledge of the density of free charge carriers under different operating conditions and illumination intensities is a prerequisite to quantify the recombination and extraction dynamics. Differential charging techniques are a promising approach to experimentally obtain the charge carrier density under the aforementioned conditions. In particular, the combination of transient photovoltage and photocurrent as well as impedance and capacitance spectroscopy have been successfully used in past studies to determine the charge carrier density of organic solar cells. In this Tutorial, these experimental techniques will be discussed in detail, highlighting fundamental principles, practical considerations, necessary corrections, advantages, drawbacks, and ultimately their limitations. Relevant references introducing more advanced concepts will be provided as well. Therefore, the present Tutorial might act as an introduction and guideline aimed at new prospective users of these techniques as well as a point of reference for more experienced researchers. Published under an exclusive license by AIP Publishing.}, language = {en} } @article{YeZhangWarbyetal.2022, author = {Ye, Fangyuan and Zhang, Shuo and Warby, Jonathan and Wu, Jiawei and Gutierrez-Partida, Emilio and Lang, Felix and Shah, Sahil and Saglamkaya, Elifnaz and Sun, Bowen and Zu, Fengshuo and Shoaee, Safa and Wang, Haifeng and Stiller, Burkhard and Neher, Dieter and Zhu, Wei-Hong and Stolterfoht, Martin and Wu, Yongzhen}, title = {Overcoming C-60-induced interfacial recombination in inverted perovskite solar cells by electron-transporting carborane}, series = {Nature Communications}, volume = {13}, journal = {Nature Communications}, number = {1}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, address = {London}, issn = {2041-1723}, doi = {10.1038/s41467-022-34203-x}, pages = {12}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Inverted perovskite solar cells still suffer from significant non-radiative recombination losses at the perovskite surface and across the perovskite/C-60 interface, limiting the future development of perovskite-based single- and multi-junction photovoltaics. Therefore, more effective inter- or transport layers are urgently required. To tackle these recombination losses, we introduce ortho-carborane as an interlayer material that has a spherical molecular structure and a three-dimensional aromaticity. Based on a variety of experimental techniques, we show that ortho-carborane decorated with phenylamino groups effectively passivates the perovskite surface and essentially eliminates the non-radiative recombination loss across the perovskite/C-60 interface with high thermal stability. We further demonstrate the potential of carborane as an electron transport material, facilitating electron extraction while blocking holes from the interface. The resulting inverted perovskite solar cells deliver a power conversion efficiency of over 23\% with a low non-radiative voltage loss of 110mV, and retain >97\% of the initial efficiency after 400h of maximum power point tracking. Overall, the designed carborane based interlayer simultaneously enables passivation, electron-transport and hole-blocking and paves the way toward more efficient and stable perovskite solar cells. Effective transport layers are essential to suppress non-radiative recombination losses. Here, the authors introduce phenylamino-functionalized ortho-carborane as an interfacial layer, and realise inverted perovskite solar cells with efficiency of over 23\% and operational stability of T97=400h.}, language = {en} } @article{TockhornSutterCruzBournazouetal.2022, author = {Tockhorn, Philipp and Sutter, Johannes and Cruz Bournazou, Alexandros and Wagner, Philipp and J{\"a}ger, Klaus and Yoo, Danbi and Lang, Felix and Grischek, Max and Li, Bor and Li, Jinzhao and Shargaieva, Oleksandra and Unger, Eva and Al-Ashouri, Amran and K{\"o}hnen, Eike and Stolterfoht, Martin and Neher, Dieter and Schlatmann, Rutger and Rech, Bernd and Stannowski, Bernd and Albrecht, Steve and Becker, Christiane}, title = {Nano-optical designs for high-efficiency monolithic perovskite-silicon tandem solar cells}, series = {Nature nanotechnology}, volume = {17}, journal = {Nature nanotechnology}, number = {11}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, address = {London [u.a.]}, issn = {1748-3387}, doi = {10.1038/s41565-022-01228-8}, pages = {1214 -- 1221}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Designing gentle sinusoidal nanotextures enables the realization of high-efficiency perovskite-silicon solar cells
Perovskite-silicon tandem solar cells offer the possibility of overcoming the power conversion efficiency limit of conventional silicon solar cells. Various textured tandem devices have been presented aiming at improved optical performance, but optimizing film growth on surface-textured wafers remains challenging. Here we present perovskite-silicon tandem solar cells with periodic nanotextures that offer various advantages without compromising the material quality of solution-processed perovskite layers. We show a reduction in reflection losses in comparison to planar tandems, with the new devices being less sensitive to deviations from optimum layer thicknesses. The nanotextures also enable a greatly increased fabrication yield from 50\% to 95\%. Moreover, the open-circuit voltage is improved by 15 mV due to the enhanced optoelectronic properties of the perovskite top cell. Our optically advanced rear reflector with a dielectric buffer layer results in reduced parasitic absorption at near-infrared wavelengths. As a result, we demonstrate a certified power conversion efficiency of 29.80\%.}, language = {en} } @article{SunSandbergNeheretal.2022, author = {Sun, Bowen and Sandberg, Oskar and Neher, Dieter and Armin, Ardalan and Shoaee, Safa}, title = {Wave optics of differential absorption spectroscopy in thick-junction organic solar cells}, series = {Physical review applied / The American Physical Society}, volume = {17}, journal = {Physical review applied / The American Physical Society}, number = {5}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, address = {College Park}, issn = {2331-7019}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevApplied.17.054016}, pages = {12}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Differential absorption spectroscopy techniques serve as powerful techniques to study the excited species in organic solar cells. However, it has always been challenging to employ these techniques for characterizing thick-junction organic solar cells, especially when a reflective top contact is involved. In this work, we present a detailed and systematic study on how a combination of the presence of the interference effect and a nonuniform charge-distribution profile, severely manipulates experimental spectra and the decay dynamics. Furthermore, we provide a practical methodology to correct these optical artifacts in differential absorption spectroscopies. The results and the proposed correction method generally apply to all kinds of differential absorption spectroscopy techniques and various thin-film systems, such as organics, perovskites, kesterites, and two-dimensional materials. Notably, it is found that the shape of differential absorption spectra can be strongly distorted, starting from 150-nm active-layer thickness; this matches the thickness range of thick-junction organic solar cells and most perovskite solar cells and needs to be carefully considered in experiments. In addition, the decay dynamics of differential absorption spectra is found to be disturbed by optical artifacts under certain conditions. With the help of the proposed correction formalism, differential spectra and the decay dynamics can be characterized on the full device of thin-film solar cells in transmission mode and yield accurate and reliable results to provide design rules for further progress.}, language = {en} } @article{YeZhangWarbyetal.2022, author = {Ye, Fangyuan and Zhang, Shuo and Warby, Jonathan and Wu, Jiawei and Gutierrez-Partida, Emilio and Lang, Felix and Shah, Sahil and Saglamkaya, Elifnaz and Sun, Bowen and Zu, Fengshuo and Shoai, Safa and Wang, Haifeng and Stiller, Burkhard and Neher, Dieter and Zhu, Wei-Hong and Stolterfoht, Martin and Wu, Yongzhen}, title = {Overcoming C₆₀-induced interfacial recombination in inverted perovskite solar cells by electron-transporting carborane}, series = {Nature Communications}, volume = {13}, journal = {Nature Communications}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, address = {London}, issn = {2041-1723}, doi = {10.1038/s41467-022-34203-x}, pages = {12}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Inverted perovskite solar cells still suffer from significant non-radiative recombination losses at the perovskite surface and across the perovskite/C₆₀ interface, limiting the future development of perovskite-based single- and multi-junction photovoltaics. Therefore, more effective inter- or transport layers are urgently required. To tackle these recombination losses, we introduce ortho-carborane as an interlayer material that has a spherical molecular structure and a three-dimensional aromaticity. Based on a variety of experimental techniques, we show that ortho-carborane decorated with phenylamino groups effectively passivates the perovskite surface and essentially eliminates the non-radiative recombination loss across the perovskite/C₆₀ interface with high thermal stability. We further demonstrate the potential of carborane as an electron transport material, facilitating electron extraction while blocking holes from the interface. The resulting inverted perovskite solar cells deliver a power conversion efficiency of over 23\% with a low non-radiative voltage loss of 110 mV, and retain >97\% of the initial efficiency after 400 h of maximum power point tracking. Overall, the designed carborane based interlayer simultaneously enables passivation, electron-transport and hole-blocking and paves the way toward more efficient and stable perovskite solar cells.}, language = {en} } @article{ZuoShoaeeKemerinketal.2021, author = {Zuo, Guangzheng and Shoaee, Safa and Kemerink, Martijn and Neher, Dieter}, title = {General rules for the impact of energetic disorder and mobility on nongeminate recombination in phase-separated organic solar cells}, series = {Physical review applied}, volume = {16}, journal = {Physical review applied}, number = {3}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, address = {College Park}, issn = {2331-7019}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevApplied.16.034027}, pages = {19}, year = {2021}, abstract = {State-of-the-art organic solar cells exhibit power conversion efficiencies of 18\% and above. These devices benefit from the suppression of free charge recombination with regard to the Langevin limit of charge encounter in a homogeneous medium. It is recognized that the main cause of suppressed free charge recombination is the reformation and resplitting of charge-transfer (CT) states at the interface between donor and acceptor domains. Here, we use kinetic Monte Carlo simulations to understand the interplay between free charge motion and recombination in an energetically disordered phase-separated donor-acceptor blend. We identify conditions for encounter-dominated and resplitting-dominated recombination. In the former regime, recombination is proportional to mobility for all parameters tested and only slightly reduced with respect to the Langevin limit. In contrast, mobility is not the decisive parameter that determines the nongeminate recombination coefficient, k(2), in the latter case, where k2 is a sole function of the morphology, CT and charge-separated (CS) energetics, and CT-state decay properties. Our simulations also show that free charge encounter in the phase-separated disordered blend is determined by the average mobility of all carriers, while CT reformation and resplitting involves mostly states near the transport energy. Therefore, charge encounter is more affected by increased disorder than the resplitting of the CT state. As a consequence, for a given mobility, larger energetic disorder, in combination with a higher hopping rate, is preferred. These findings have implications for the understanding of suppressed recombination in solar cells with nonfullerene acceptors, which are known to exhibit lower energetic disorder than that of fullerenes.}, language = {en} } @article{TaitReckwitzArvindetal.2021, author = {Tait, Claudia E. and Reckwitz, Anna and Arvind, Malavika and Neher, Dieter and Bittl, Robert and Behrends, Jan}, title = {Spin-spin interactions and spin delocalisation in a doped organic semiconductor probed by EPR spectroscopy}, series = {Physical chemistry, chemical physics : PCCP ; a journal of European chemical societies}, volume = {23}, journal = {Physical chemistry, chemical physics : PCCP ; a journal of European chemical societies}, number = {25}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, address = {Cambridge}, issn = {1463-9076}, doi = {10.1039/d1cp02133h}, pages = {13827 -- 13841}, year = {2021}, abstract = {The enhancement and control of the electrical conductivity of organic semiconductors is fundamental for their use in optoelectronic applications and can be achieved by molecular doping, which introduces additional charge carriers through electron transfer between a dopant molecule and the organic semiconductor. Here, we use Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy to characterise the unpaired spins associated with the charges generated by molecular doping of the prototypical organic semiconductor poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) with 2,3,5,6-tetrafluoro-7,7,8,8-tetracyanoquinodimethane (F(4)TCNQ) and tris(pentafluorophenyl)borane (BCF). The EPR results reveal the P3HT radical cation as the only paramagnetic species in BCF-doped P3HT films and show evidence for increased mobility of the detected spins at high doping concentrations as well as formation of antiferromagnetically coupled spin pairs leading to decreased spin concentrations at low temperatures. The EPR signature for F(4)TCNQ-doped P3HT is found to be determined by spin exchange between P3HT radical cations and F(4)TCNQ radical anions. Results from continuous-wave and pulse EPR measurements suggest the presence of the unpaired spin on P3HT in a multitude of environments, ranging from free P3HT radical cations with similar properties to those observed in BCF-doped P3HT, to pairs of dipolar and exchange-coupled spins on P3HT and the dopant anion. Characterisation of the proton hyperfine interactions by ENDOR allowed quantification of the extent of spin delocalisation and revealed reduced delocalisation in the F(4)TCNQ-doped P3HT films.}, language = {en} } @article{TokmoldinVollbrechtHosseinietal.2021, author = {Tokmoldin, Nurlan and Vollbrecht, Joachim and Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad and Sun, Bowen and Perdig{\´o}n-Toro, Lorena and Woo, Han Young and Zou, Yingping and Neher, Dieter and Shoaee, Safa}, title = {Explaining the fill-factor and photocurrent losses of nonfullerene acceptor-based solar cells by probing the long-range charge carrier diffusion and drift lengths}, series = {Advanced energy materials}, volume = {11}, journal = {Advanced energy materials}, number = {22}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1614-6840}, doi = {10.1002/aenm.202100804}, pages = {9}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Organic solar cells (OSC) nowadays match their inorganic competitors in terms of current production but lag behind with regards to their open-circuit voltage loss and fill-factor, with state-of-the-art OSCs rarely displaying fill-factor of 80\% and above. The fill-factor of transport-limited solar cells, including organic photovoltaic devices, is affected by material and device-specific parameters, whose combination is represented in terms of the established figures of merit, such as theta and alpha. Herein, it is demonstrated that these figures of merit are closely related to the long-range carrier drift and diffusion lengths. Further, a simple approach is presented to devise these characteristic lengths using steady-state photoconductance measurements. This yields a straightforward way of determining theta and alpha in complete cells and under operating conditions. This approach is applied to a variety of photovoltaic devices-including the high efficiency nonfullerene acceptor blends-and show that the diffusion length of the free carriers provides a good correlation with the fill-factor. It is, finally, concluded that most state-of-the-art organic solar cells exhibit a sufficiently large drift length to guarantee efficient charge extraction at short circuit, but that they still suffer from too small diffusion lengths of photogenerated carriers limiting their fill factor.}, language = {en} } @article{PranavBenduhnNymanetal.2021, author = {Pranav, Manasi and Benduhn, Johannes and Nyman, Mathias and Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad and Kublitski, Jonas and Shoaee, Safa and Neher, Dieter and Leo, Karl and Spoltore, Donato}, title = {Enhanced charge selectivity via anodic-C60 layer reduces nonradiative losses in organic solar cells}, series = {ACS applied materials \& interfaces}, volume = {13}, journal = {ACS applied materials \& interfaces}, number = {10}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1944-8244}, doi = {10.1021/acsami.1c00049}, pages = {12603 -- 12609}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Interfacial layers in conjunction with suitable charge-transport layers can significantly improve the performance of optoelectronic devices by facilitating efficient charge carrier injection and extraction. This work uses a neat C-60 interlayer on the anode to experimentally reveal that surface recombination is a significant contributor to nonradiative recombination losses in organic solar cells. These losses are shown to proportionally increase with the extent of contact between donor molecules in the photoactive layer and a molybdenum oxide (MoO3) hole extraction layer, proven by calculating voltage losses in low- and high-donor-content bulk heterojunction device architectures. Using a novel in-device determination of the built-in voltage, the suppression of surface recombination, due to the insertion of a thin anodic-C-60 interlayer on MoO3, is attributed to an enhanced built-in potential. The increased built-in voltage reduces the presence of minority charge carriers at the electrodes-a new perspective on the principle of selective charge extraction layers. The benefit to device efficiency is limited by a critical interlayer thickness, which depends on the donor material in bilayer devices. Given the high popularity of MoO3 as an efficient hole extraction and injection layer and the increasingly popular discussion on interfacial phenomena in organic optoelectronic devices, these findings are relevant to and address different branches of organic electronics, providing insights for future device design.}, language = {en} } @article{PerdigonToroLeQuangPhuongZeiskeetal.2021, author = {Perdig{\´o}n-Toro, Lorena and Le Quang Phuong, and Zeiske, Stefan and Vandewal, Koen and Armin, Ardalan and Shoaee, Safa and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Excitons dominate the emission from PM6}, series = {ACS energy letters / American Chemical Society}, volume = {6}, journal = {ACS energy letters / American Chemical Society}, number = {2}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {2380-8195}, doi = {10.1021/acsenergylett.0c02572}, pages = {557 -- 564}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Non-fullerene acceptors (NFAs) are far more emissive than their fullerene-based counterparts. Here, we study the spectral properties of photocurrent generation and recombination of the blend of the donor polymer PM6 with the NFA Y6. We find that the radiative recombination of free charges is almost entirely due to the re-occupation and decay of Y6 singlet excitons, but that this pathway contributes less than 1\% to the total recombination. As such, the open-circuit voltage of the PM6:Y6 blend is determined by the energetics and kinetics of the charge-transfer (CT) state. Moreover, we find that no information on the energetics of the CT state manifold can be gained from the low-energy tail of the photovoltaic external quantum efficiency spectrum, which is dominated by the excitation spectrum of the Y6 exciton. We, finally, estimate the charge-separated state to lie only 120 meV below the Y6 singlet exciton energy, meaning that this blend indeed represents a high-efficiency system with a low energetic offset.}, language = {en} } @misc{PhuongHosseiniSandbergetal.2020, author = {Phuong, Le Quang and Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad and Sandberg, Oskar J. and Zou, Yingping and Woo, Han Young and Neher, Dieter and Shoaee, Safa}, title = {Quantifying quasi-fermi level splitting and open-circuit voltage losses in highly efficient nonfullerene organic solar cells}, series = {Zweitver{\"o}ffentlichungen der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Zweitver{\"o}ffentlichungen der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, number = {1}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-57001}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-570018}, pages = {8}, year = {2020}, abstract = {The power conversion efficiency (PCE) of state-of-the-art organic solar cells is still limited by significant open-circuit voltage (V-OC) losses, partly due to the excitonic nature of organic materials and partly due to ill-designed architectures. Thus, quantifying different contributions of the V-OC losses is of importance to enable further improvements in the performance of organic solar cells. Herein, the spectroscopic and semiconductor device physics approaches are combined to identify and quantify losses from surface recombination and bulk recombination. Several state-of-the-art systems that demonstrate different V-OC losses in their performance are presented. By evaluating the quasi-Fermi level splitting (QFLS) and the V-OC as a function of the excitation fluence in nonfullerene-based PM6:Y6, PM6:Y11, and fullerene-based PPDT2FBT:PCBM devices with different architectures, the voltage losses due to different recombination processes occurring in the active layers, the transport layers, and at the interfaces are assessed. It is found that surface recombination at interfaces in the studied solar cells is negligible, and thus, suppressing the non-radiative recombination in the active layers is the key factor to enhance the PCE of these devices. This study provides a universal tool to explain and further improve the performance of recently demonstrated high-open-circuit-voltage organic solar cells.}, language = {en} } @article{ZuSchultzWolffetal.2020, author = {Zu, Fengshuo and Schultz, Thorsten and Wolff, Christian Michael and Shin, Dongguen and Frohloff, Lennart and Neher, Dieter and Amsalem, Patrick and Koch, Norbert}, title = {Position-locking of volatile reaction products by atmosphere and capping layers slows down photodecomposition of methylammonium lead triiodide perovskite}, series = {RSC Advances}, volume = {10}, journal = {RSC Advances}, number = {30}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, address = {Cambridge}, issn = {2046-2069}, doi = {10.1039/d0ra03572f}, pages = {17534 -- 17542}, year = {2020}, abstract = {The remarkable progress of metal halide perovskites in photovoltaics has led to the power conversion efficiency approaching 26\%. However, practical applications of perovskite-based solar cells are challenged by the stability issues, of which the most critical one is photo-induced degradation. Bare CH3NH3PbI3 perovskite films are known to decompose rapidly, with methylammonium and iodine as volatile species and residual solid PbI2 and metallic Pb, under vacuum under white light illumination, on the timescale of minutes. We find, in agreement with previous work, that the degradation is non-uniform and proceeds predominantly from the surface, and that illumination under N-2 and ambient air (relative humidity 20\%) does not induce substantial degradation even after several hours. Yet, in all cases the release of iodine from the perovskite surface is directly identified by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. This goes in hand with a loss of organic cations and the formation of metallic Pb. When CH3NH3PbI3 films are covered with a few nm thick organic capping layer, either charge selective or non-selective, the rapid photodecomposition process under ultrahigh vacuum is reduced by more than one order of magnitude, and becomes similar in timescale to that under N-2 or air. We conclude that the light-induced decomposition reaction of CH3NH3PbI3, leading to volatile methylammonium and iodine, is largely reversible as long as these products are restrained from leaving the surface. This is readily achieved by ambient atmospheric pressure, as well as a thin organic capping layer even under ultrahigh vacuum. In addition to explaining the impact of gas pressure on the stability of this perovskite, our results indicate that covalently "locking" the position of perovskite components at the surface or an interface should enhance the overall photostability.}, language = {en} } @article{RaoufiHoermannLigorioetal.2020, author = {Raoufi, Meysam and H{\"o}rmann, Ulrich and Ligorio, Giovanni and Hildebrandt, Jana and P{\"a}tzel, Michael and Schultz, Thorsten and Perdigon-Toro, Lorena and Koch, Norbert and List-Kratochvil, Emil and Hecht, Stefan and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Simultaneous effect of ultraviolet radiation and surface modification on the work function and hole injection properties of ZnO thin films}, series = {Physica Status Solidi. A , Applications and materials science}, volume = {217}, journal = {Physica Status Solidi. A , Applications and materials science}, number = {5}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1862-6300}, doi = {10.1002/pssa.201900876}, pages = {1 -- 6}, year = {2020}, abstract = {The combined effect of ultraviolet (UV) light soaking and self-assembled monolayer deposition on the work function (WF) of thin ZnO layers and on the efficiency of hole injection into the prototypical conjugated polymer poly(3-hexylthiophen-2,5-diyl) (P3HT) is systematically investigated. It is shown that the WF and injection efficiency depend strongly on the history of UV light exposure. Proper treatment of the ZnO layer enables ohmic hole injection into P3HT, demonstrating ZnO as a potential anode material for organic optoelectronic devices. The results also suggest that valid conclusions on the energy-level alignment at the ZnO/organic interfaces may only be drawn if the illumination history is precisely known and controlled. This is inherently problematic when comparing electronic data from ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS) measurements carried out under different or ill-defined illumination conditions.}, language = {en} } @article{SamsonRechPerdigonToroetal.2020, author = {Samson, Stephanie and Rech, Jeromy and Perdigon-Toro, Lorena and Peng, Zhengxing and Shoaee, Safa and Ade, Harald and Neher, Dieter and Stolterfoht, Martin and You, Wei}, title = {Organic solar cells with large insensitivity to donor polymer molar mass across all acceptor classes}, series = {ACS applied polymer materials}, volume = {2}, journal = {ACS applied polymer materials}, number = {11}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {2637-6105}, doi = {10.1021/acsapm.0c01041}, pages = {5300 -- 5308}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Donor polymer number-average molar mass (M-n) has long been known to influence organic photovoltaic (OPV) performance via changes in both the polymer properties and the resulting bulk heterojunction morphology. The exact nature of these M-n effects varies from system to system, although there is generally some intermediate M-n that results in optimal performance. Interestingly, our earlier work with the difluorobenzotriazole (FTAZ)-based donor polymer, paired with either N2200 (polymer acceptor) or PC61BM (fullerene acceptor), PcBm demonstrated <10\% variation in power conversion efficiency and a consistent morphology over a large span of M-n (30 kg/mol to over 100 kg/mol). Would such insensitivity to polymer M-n still hold true when prevailing small molecular acceptors were used with FTAZ? To answer this question, we explored the impact of FTAZ on OPVs with ITIC, a high-performance small-molecule fused-ring electron acceptor (FREA). By probing the photovoltaic characteristics of the resulting OPVs, we show that a similar FTAZ mn insensitivity is also found in the FTAZ:ITIC system. This study highlights a single-donor polymer which, when paired with an archetypal fullerene, polymer, and FREA, results in systems that are largely insensitive to donor M. Our results may have implications in polymer batch-to-batch reproducibility, in particular, relaxing the need for tight M-n control during synthesis.}, language = {en} } @article{GarciaBenitoQuartiQuelozetal.2020, author = {Garc{\´i}a-Benito, In{\´e}s and Quarti, Claudio and Queloz, Valentin I. E. and Hofstetter, Yvonne J. and Becker-Koch, David and Caprioglio, Pietro and Neher, Dieter and Orlandi, Simonetta and Cavazzini, Marco and Pozzi, Gianluca and Even, Jacky and Nazeeruddin, Mohammad Khaja and Vaynzof, Yana and Grancini, Giulia}, title = {Fluorination of organic spacer impacts on the structural and optical response of 2D perovskites}, series = {Frontiers in Chemistry}, volume = {7}, journal = {Frontiers in Chemistry}, publisher = {Frontiers Media}, address = {Lausanne}, issn = {2296-2646}, doi = {10.3389/fchem.2019.00946}, pages = {1 -- 11}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Low-dimensional hybrid perovskites have triggered significant research interest due to their intrinsically tunable optoelectronic properties and technologically relevant material stability. In particular, the role of the organic spacer on the inherent structural and optical features in two-dimensional (2D) perovskites is paramount for material optimization. To obtain a deeper understanding of the relationship between spacers and the corresponding 2D perovskite film properties, we explore the influence of the partial substitution of hydrogen atoms by fluorine in an alkylammonium organic cation, resulting in (Lc)(2)PbI4 and (Lf)(2)PbI4 2D perovskites, respectively. Consequently, optical analysis reveals a clear 0.2 eV blue-shift in the excitonic position at room temperature. This result can be mainly attributed to a band gap opening, with negligible effects on the exciton binding energy. According to Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations, the band gap increases due to a larger distortion of the structure that decreases the atomic overlap of the wavefunctions and correspondingly bandwidth of the valence and conduction bands. In addition, fluorination impacts the structural rigidity of the 2D perovskite, resulting in a stable structure at room temperature and the absence of phase transitions at a low temperature, in contrast to the widely reported polymorphism in some non-fluorinated materials that exhibit such a phase transition. This indicates that a small perturbation in the material structure can strongly influence the overall structural stability and related phase transition of 2D perovskites, making them more robust to any phase change. This work provides key information on how the fluorine content in organic spacer influence the structural distortion of 2D perovskites and their optical properties which possess remarkable importance for future optoelectronic applications, for instance in the field of light-emitting devices or sensors.}, language = {en} } @misc{GarciaBenitoQuartiQuelozetal.2020, author = {Garc{\´i}a-Benito, In{\´e}s and Quarti, Claudio and Queloz, Valentin I. E. and Hofstetter, Yvonne J. and Becker-Koch, David and Caprioglio, Pietro and Neher, Dieter and Orlandi, Simonetta and Cavazzini, Marco and Pozzi, Gianluca and Even, Jacky and Nazeeruddin, Mohammad Khaja and Vaynzof, Yana and Grancini, Giulia}, title = {Fluorination of organic spacer impacts on the structural and optical response of 2D perovskites}, series = {Zweitver{\"o}ffentlichungen der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Zweitver{\"o}ffentlichungen der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-51242}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-512420}, pages = {13}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Low-dimensional hybrid perovskites have triggered significant research interest due to their intrinsically tunable optoelectronic properties and technologically relevant material stability. In particular, the role of the organic spacer on the inherent structural and optical features in two-dimensional (2D) perovskites is paramount for material optimization. To obtain a deeper understanding of the relationship between spacers and the corresponding 2D perovskite film properties, we explore the influence of the partial substitution of hydrogen atoms by fluorine in an alkylammonium organic cation, resulting in (Lc)(2)PbI4 and (Lf)(2)PbI4 2D perovskites, respectively. Consequently, optical analysis reveals a clear 0.2 eV blue-shift in the excitonic position at room temperature. This result can be mainly attributed to a band gap opening, with negligible effects on the exciton binding energy. According to Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations, the band gap increases due to a larger distortion of the structure that decreases the atomic overlap of the wavefunctions and correspondingly bandwidth of the valence and conduction bands. In addition, fluorination impacts the structural rigidity of the 2D perovskite, resulting in a stable structure at room temperature and the absence of phase transitions at a low temperature, in contrast to the widely reported polymorphism in some non-fluorinated materials that exhibit such a phase transition. This indicates that a small perturbation in the material structure can strongly influence the overall structural stability and related phase transition of 2D perovskites, making them more robust to any phase change. This work provides key information on how the fluorine content in organic spacer influence the structural distortion of 2D perovskites and their optical properties which possess remarkable importance for future optoelectronic applications, for instance in the field of light-emitting devices or sensors.}, language = {en} } @misc{SchulzeBettBivouretal.2020, author = {Schulze, Patricia S. C. and Bett, Alexander J. and Bivour, Martin and Caprioglio, Pietro and Gerspacher, Fabian M. and Kabakl{\i}, {\"O}zde Ş. and Richter, Armin and Stolterfoht, Martin and Zhang, Qinxin and Neher, Dieter and Hermle, Martin and Hillebrecht, Harald and Glunz, Stefan W. and Goldschmidt, Jan Christoph}, title = {25.1\% high-efficiency monolithic perovskite silicon tandem solar cell with a high bandgap perovskite absorber}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, number = {7}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-52566}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-525668}, pages = {12}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Monolithic perovskite silicon tandem solar cells can overcome the theoretical efficiency limit of silicon solar cells. This requires an optimum bandgap, high quantum efficiency, and high stability of the perovskite. Herein, a silicon heterojunction bottom cell is combined with a perovskite top cell, with an optimum bandgap of 1.68 eV in planar p-i-n tandem configuration. A methylammonium-free FA(0.75)Cs(0.25)Pb(I0.8Br0.2)(3) perovskite with high Cs content is investigated for improved stability. A 10\% molarity increase to 1.1 m of the perovskite precursor solution results in approximate to 75 nm thicker absorber layers and 0.7 mA cm(-2) higher short-circuit current density. With the optimized absorber, tandem devices reach a high fill factor of 80\% and up to 25.1\% certified efficiency. The unencapsulated tandem device shows an efficiency improvement of 2.3\% (absolute) over 5 months, showing the robustness of the absorber against degradation. Moreover, a photoluminescence quantum yield analysis reveals that with adapted charge transport materials and surface passivation, along with improved antireflection measures, the high bandgap perovskite absorber has the potential for 30\% tandem efficiency in the near future.}, language = {en} } @misc{StolterfohtGrischekCaprioglioetal.2020, author = {Stolterfoht, Martin and Grischek, Max and Caprioglio, Pietro and Wolff, Christian Michael and Gutierrez-Partida, Emilio and Pe{\~n}a-Camargo, Francisco and Rothhardt, Daniel and Zhang, Shanshan and Raoufi, Meysam and Wolansky, Jakob and Abdi-Jalebi, Mojtaba and Stranks, Samuel D. and Albrecht, Steve and Kirchartz, Thomas and Neher, Dieter}, title = {How to quantify the efficiency potential of neat perovskite films}, series = {Zweitver{\"o}ffentlichungen der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Zweitver{\"o}ffentlichungen der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, number = {17}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-51662}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-516622}, pages = {12}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Perovskite photovoltaic (PV) cells have demonstrated power conversion efficiencies (PCE) that are close to those of monocrystalline silicon cells; however, in contrast to silicon PV, perovskites are not limited by Auger recombination under 1-sun illumination. Nevertheless, compared to GaAs and monocrystalline silicon PV, perovskite cells have significantly lower fill factors due to a combination of resistive and non-radiative recombination losses. This necessitates a deeper understanding of the underlying loss mechanisms and in particular the ideality factor of the cell. By measuring the intensity dependence of the external open-circuit voltage and the internal quasi-Fermi level splitting (QFLS), the transport resistance-free efficiency of the complete cell as well as the efficiency potential of any neat perovskite film with or without attached transport layers are quantified. Moreover, intensity-dependent QFLS measurements on different perovskite compositions allows for disentangling of the impact of the interfaces and the perovskite surface on the non-radiative fill factor and open-circuit voltage loss. It is found that potassium-passivated triple cation perovskite films stand out by their exceptionally high implied PCEs > 28\%, which could be achieved with ideal transport layers. Finally, strategies are presented to reduce both the ideality factor and transport losses to push the efficiency to the thermodynamic limit.}, language = {en} } @misc{WangSmithSkroblinetal.2020, author = {Wang, Qiong and Smith, Joel A. and Skroblin, Dieter and Steele, Julian A. and Wolff, Christian Michael and Caprioglio, Pietro and Stolterfoht, Martin and K{\"o}bler, Hans and Turren-Cruz, Silver-Hamill and Li, Meng and Gollwitzer, Christian and Neher, Dieter and Abate, Antonio}, title = {Managing phase purities and crystal orientation for high-performance and photostable cesium lead halide perovskite solar cells}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, number = {9}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-52537}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-525374}, pages = {11}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Inorganic perovskites with cesium (Cs+) as the cation have great potential as photovoltaic materials if their phase purity and stability can be addressed. Herein, a series of inorganic perovskites is studied, and it is found that the power conversion efficiency of solar cells with compositions CsPbI1.8Br1.2, CsPbI2.0Br1.0, and CsPbI2.2Br0.8 exhibits a high dependence on the initial annealing step that is found to significantly affect the crystallization and texture behavior of the final perovskite film. At its optimized annealing temperature, CsPbI1.8Br1.2 exhibits a pure orthorhombic phase and only one crystal orientation of the (110) plane. Consequently, this allows for the best efficiency of up to 14.6\% and the longest operational lifetime, T-S80, of approximate to 300 h, averaged of over six solar cells, during the maximum power point tracking measurement under continuous light illumination and nitrogen atmosphere. This work provides essential progress on the enhancement of photovoltaic performance and stability of CsPbI3 - xBrx perovskite solar cells.}, language = {en} } @article{PerdigonToroZhangMarkinaetal.2020, author = {Perdigon-Toro, Lorena and Zhang, Huotian and Markina, Anastaa si and Yuan, Jun and Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad and Wolff, Christian Michael and Zuo, Guangzheng and Stolterfoht, Martin and Zou, Yingping and Gao, Feng and Andrienko, Denis and Shoaee, Safa and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Barrierless free charge generation in the high-performance PM6:Y6 bulk heterojunction non-fullerene solar cell}, series = {Advanced materials}, volume = {32}, journal = {Advanced materials}, number = {9}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {0935-9648}, doi = {10.1002/adma.201906763}, pages = {9}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Organic solar cells are currently experiencing a second golden age thanks to the development of novel non-fullerene acceptors (NFAs). Surprisingly, some of these blends exhibit high efficiencies despite a low energy offset at the heterojunction. Herein, free charge generation in the high-performance blend of the donor polymer PM6 with the NFA Y6 is thoroughly investigated as a function of internal field, temperature and excitation energy. Results show that photocurrent generation is essentially barrierless with near-unity efficiency, regardless of excitation energy. Efficient charge separation is maintained over a wide temperature range, down to 100 K, despite the small driving force for charge generation. Studies on a blend with a low concentration of the NFA, measurements of the energetic disorder, and theoretical modeling suggest that CT state dissociation is assisted by the electrostatic interfacial field which for Y6 is large enough to compensate the Coulomb dissociation barrier.}, language = {en} } @article{SandbergKurpiersStolterfohtetal.2020, author = {Sandberg, Oskar J. and Kurpiers, Jona and Stolterfoht, Martin and Neher, Dieter and Meredith, Paul and Shoaee, Safa and Armin, Ardalan}, title = {On the question of the need for a built-in potential in Perovskite solar cells}, series = {Advanced materials interfaces}, volume = {7}, journal = {Advanced materials interfaces}, number = {10}, publisher = {Wiley}, address = {Hoboken}, issn = {2196-7350}, doi = {10.1002/admi.202000041}, pages = {8}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Perovskite semiconductors as the active materials in efficient solar cells exhibit free carrier diffusion lengths on the order of microns at low illumination fluxes and many hundreds of nanometers under 1 sun conditions. These lengthscales are significantly larger than typical junction thicknesses, and thus the carrier transport and charge collection should be expected to be diffusion controlled. A consensus along these lines is emerging in the field. However, the question as to whether the built-in potential plays any role is still of matter of some conjecture. This important question using phase-sensitive photocurrent measurements and theoretical device simulations based upon the drift-diffusion framework is addressed. In particular, the role of the built-in electric field and charge-selective transport layers in state-of-the-art p-i-n perovskite solar cells comparing experimental findings and simulation predictions is probed. It is found that while charge collection in the junction does not require a drift field per se, a built-in potential is still needed to avoid the formation of reverse electric fields inside the active layer, and to ensure efficient extraction through the charge transport layers.}, language = {en} } @article{StolterfohtGrischekCaprioglioetal.2020, author = {Stolterfoht, Martin and Grischek, Max and Caprioglio, Pietro and Wolff, Christian Michael and Gutierrez-Partida, Emilio and Pe{\~n}a-Camargo, Francisco and Rothhardt, Daniel and Zhang, Shanshan and Raoufi, Meysam and Wolansky, Jakob and Abdi-Jalebi, Mojtaba and Stranks, Samuel D. and Albrecht, Steve and Kirchartz, Thomas and Neher, Dieter}, title = {How to quantify the efficiency potential of neat perovskite films}, series = {Advanced Materials}, volume = {32}, journal = {Advanced Materials}, number = {17}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {0935-9648}, doi = {10.1002/adma.202000080}, pages = {1 -- 10}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Perovskite photovoltaic (PV) cells have demonstrated power conversion efficiencies (PCE) that are close to those of monocrystalline silicon cells; however, in contrast to silicon PV, perovskites are not limited by Auger recombination under 1-sun illumination. Nevertheless, compared to GaAs and monocrystalline silicon PV, perovskite cells have significantly lower fill factors due to a combination of resistive and non-radiative recombination losses. This necessitates a deeper understanding of the underlying loss mechanisms and in particular the ideality factor of the cell. By measuring the intensity dependence of the external open-circuit voltage and the internal quasi-Fermi level splitting (QFLS), the transport resistance-free efficiency of the complete cell as well as the efficiency potential of any neat perovskite film with or without attached transport layers are quantified. Moreover, intensity-dependent QFLS measurements on different perovskite compositions allows for disentangling of the impact of the interfaces and the perovskite surface on the non-radiative fill factor and open-circuit voltage loss. It is found that potassium-passivated triple cation perovskite films stand out by their exceptionally high implied PCEs > 28\%, which could be achieved with ideal transport layers. Finally, strategies are presented to reduce both the ideality factor and transport losses to push the efficiency to the thermodynamic limit.}, language = {en} } @article{PhuongHosseiniSandbergetal.2020, author = {Phuong, Le Quang and Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad and Sandberg, Oskar J. and Zou, Yingping and Woo, Han Young and Neher, Dieter and Shoaee, Safa}, title = {Quantifying quasi-fermi level splitting and open-circuit voltage losses in highly efficient nonfullerene organic solar cells}, series = {Solar RRL}, volume = {5}, journal = {Solar RRL}, number = {1}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {2367-198X}, doi = {10.1002/solr.202000649}, pages = {6}, year = {2020}, abstract = {The power conversion efficiency (PCE) of state-of-the-art organic solar cells is still limited by significant open-circuit voltage (V-OC) losses, partly due to the excitonic nature of organic materials and partly due to ill-designed architectures. Thus, quantifying different contributions of the V-OC losses is of importance to enable further improvements in the performance of organic solar cells. Herein, the spectroscopic and semiconductor device physics approaches are combined to identify and quantify losses from surface recombination and bulk recombination. Several state-of-the-art systems that demonstrate different V-OC losses in their performance are presented. By evaluating the quasi-Fermi level splitting (QFLS) and the V-OC as a function of the excitation fluence in nonfullerene-based PM6:Y6, PM6:Y11, and fullerene-based PPDT2FBT:PCBM devices with different architectures, the voltage losses due to different recombination processes occurring in the active layers, the transport layers, and at the interfaces are assessed. It is found that surface recombination at interfaces in the studied solar cells is negligible, and thus, suppressing the non-radiative recombination in the active layers is the key factor to enhance the PCE of these devices. This study provides a universal tool to explain and further improve the performance of recently demonstrated high-open-circuit-voltage organic solar cells.}, language = {en} } @article{SchulzeBettBivouretal.2020, author = {Schulze, Patricia S. C. and Bett, Alexander J. and Bivour, Martin and Caprioglio, Pietro and Gerspacher, Fabian M. and Kabakl{\i}, {\"O}zde Ş. and Richter, Armin and Stolterfoht, Martin and Zhang, Qinxin and Neher, Dieter and Hermle, Martin and Hillebrecht, Harald and Glunz, Stefan W. and Goldschmidt, Jan Christoph}, title = {25.1\% high-efficiency monolithic perovskite silicon tandem solar cell with a high bandgap perovskite absorber}, series = {Solar RRL}, volume = {4}, journal = {Solar RRL}, number = {7}, publisher = {John Wiley \& Sons, Inc.}, address = {New Jersey}, pages = {10}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Monolithic perovskite silicon tandem solar cells can overcome the theoretical efficiency limit of silicon solar cells. This requires an optimum bandgap, high quantum efficiency, and high stability of the perovskite. Herein, a silicon heterojunction bottom cell is combined with a perovskite top cell, with an optimum bandgap of 1.68 eV in planar p-i-n tandem configuration. A methylammonium-free FA(0.75)Cs(0.25)Pb(I0.8Br0.2)(3) perovskite with high Cs content is investigated for improved stability. A 10\% molarity increase to 1.1 m of the perovskite precursor solution results in approximate to 75 nm thicker absorber layers and 0.7 mA cm(-2) higher short-circuit current density. With the optimized absorber, tandem devices reach a high fill factor of 80\% and up to 25.1\% certified efficiency. The unencapsulated tandem device shows an efficiency improvement of 2.3\% (absolute) over 5 months, showing the robustness of the absorber against degradation. Moreover, a photoluminescence quantum yield analysis reveals that with adapted charge transport materials and surface passivation, along with improved antireflection measures, the high bandgap perovskite absorber has the potential for 30\% tandem efficiency in the near future.}, language = {en} } @article{WangSmithSkroblinetal.2020, author = {Wang, Qiong and Smith, Joel A. and Skroblin, Dieter and Steele, Julian A. and Wolff, Christian Michael and Caprioglio, Pietro and Stolterfoht, Martin and K{\"o}bler, Hans and Turren-Cruz, Silver-Hamill and Li, Meng and Gollwitzer, Christian and Neher, Dieter and Abate, Antonio}, title = {Managing phase purities and crystal orientation for high-performance and photostable cesium lead halide perovskite solar cells}, series = {Solar RRL}, volume = {4}, journal = {Solar RRL}, number = {9}, publisher = {WILEY-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, pages = {9}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Inorganic perovskites with cesium (Cs+) as the cation have great potential as photovoltaic materials if their phase purity and stability can be addressed. Herein, a series of inorganic perovskites is studied, and it is found that the power conversion efficiency of solar cells with compositions CsPbI1.8Br1.2, CsPbI2.0Br1.0, and CsPbI2.2Br0.8 exhibits a high dependence on the initial annealing step that is found to significantly affect the crystallization and texture behavior of the final perovskite film. At its optimized annealing temperature, CsPbI1.8Br1.2 exhibits a pure orthorhombic phase and only one crystal orientation of the (110) plane. Consequently, this allows for the best efficiency of up to 14.6\% and the longest operational lifetime, T-S80, of approximate to 300 h, averaged of over six solar cells, during the maximum power point tracking measurement under continuous light illumination and nitrogen atmosphere. This work provides essential progress on the enhancement of photovoltaic performance and stability of CsPbI3 - xBrx perovskite solar cells.}, language = {en} } @article{HosseiniTokmoldinLeeetal.2020, author = {Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad and Tokmoldin, Nurlan and Lee, Young Woong and Zou, Yingping and Woo, Han Young and Neher, Dieter and Shoaee, Safa}, title = {Putting order into PM6:Y6 solar cells to reduce the langevin recombination in 400 nm thick junction}, series = {Solar RRL}, volume = {4}, journal = {Solar RRL}, number = {11}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {2367-198X}, doi = {10.1002/solr.202000498}, pages = {7}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Increasing the active layer thickness without sacrificing the power conversion efficiency (PCE) is one of the great challenges faced by organic solar cells (OSCs) for commercialization. Recently, PM6:Y6 as an OSC based on a non-fullerene acceptor (NFA) has excited the community because of its PCE reaching as high as 15.9\%; however, by increasing the thickness, the PCE drops due to the reduction of the fill factor (FF). This drop is attributed to change in mobility ratio with increasing thickness. Furthermore, this work demonstrates that by regulating the packing and the crystallinity of the donor and the acceptor, through volumetric content of chloronaphthalene (CN) as a solvent additive, one can improve the FF of a thick PM6:Y6 device (approximate to 400 nm) from 58\% to 68\% (PCE enhances from 12.2\% to 14.4\%). The data indicate that the origin of this enhancement is the reduction of the structural and energetic disorders in the thick device with 1.5\% CN compared with 0.5\% CN. This correlates with improved electron and hole mobilities and a 50\% suppressed bimolecular recombination, such that the non-Langevin reduction factor is 180 times. This work reveals the role of disorder on the charge extraction and bimolecular recombination of NFA-based OSCs.}, language = {en} } @article{MansourLungwitzSchultzetal.2020, author = {Mansour, Ahmed E. and Lungwitz, Dominique and Schultz, Thorsten and Arvind, Malavika and Valencia, Ana M. and Cocchi, Caterina and Opitz, Andreas and Neher, Dieter and Koch, Norbert}, title = {The optical signatures of molecular-doping induced polarons in poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl)}, series = {Journal of materials chemistry : C, Materials for optical and electronic devices}, volume = {8}, journal = {Journal of materials chemistry : C, Materials for optical and electronic devices}, number = {8}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, address = {Cambridge}, issn = {2050-7526}, doi = {10.1039/c9tc06509a}, pages = {2870 -- 2879}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Optical absorption spectroscopy is a key method to investigate doped conjugated polymers and to characterize the doping-induced charge carriers, i.e., polarons. For prototypical poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl) (P3HT), the absorption intensity of molecular dopant induced polarons is widely used to estimate the carrier density and the doping efficiency, i.e., the number of polarons formed per dopant molecule. However, the dependence of the polaron-related absorption features on the structure of doped P3HT, being either aggregates or separated individual chains, is not comprehensively understood in contrast to the optical absorption features of neutral P3HT. In this work, we unambiguously differentiate the optical signatures of polarons on individual P3HT chains and aggregates in solution, notably the latter exhibiting the same shape as aggregates in solid thin films. This is enabled by employing tris(pentafluorophenyl)borane (BCF) as dopant, as this dopant forms only ion pairs with P3HT and no charge transfer complexes, and BCF and its anion have no absorption in the spectral region of P3HT polarons. Polarons on individual chains exhibit absorption peaks at 1.5 eV and 0.6 eV, whereas in aggregates the high-energy peak is split into a doublet 1.3 eV and 1.65 eV, and the low-energy peak is shifted below 0.5 eV. The dependence of the fraction of solvated individual chains versus aggregates on absolute solution concentration, dopant concentration, and temperature is elucidated, and we find that aggregates predominate in solution under commonly used processing conditions. Aggregates in BCF-doped P3HT solution can be effectively removed upon simple filtering. From varying the filter pore size (down to 200 nm) and thin film morphology characterization with scanning force microscopy we reveal the aggregates' size dependence on solution absolute concentration and dopant concentration. Furthermore, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy shows that the dopant loading in aggregates is higher than for individual P3HT chains. The results of this study help understanding the impact of solution pre-aggregation on thin film properties of molecularly doped P3HT, and highlight the importance of considering such aggregation for other doped conjugated polymers in general.}, language = {en} } @article{TokmoldinHosseiniRaoufietal.2020, author = {Tokmoldin, Nurlan and Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad and Raoufi, Meysam and Phuong, Le Quang and Sandberg, Oskar J. and Guan, Huilan and Zou, Yingping and Neher, Dieter and Shoaee, Safa}, title = {Extraordinarily long diffusion length in PM6:Y6 organic solar cells}, series = {Journal of materials chemistry : A, materials for energy and sustainability}, volume = {8}, journal = {Journal of materials chemistry : A, materials for energy and sustainability}, number = {16}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, address = {Cambridge}, issn = {2050-7488}, doi = {10.1039/d0ta03016c}, pages = {7854 -- 7860}, year = {2020}, abstract = {The PM6:Y6 bulk-heterojunction (BHJ) blend system achieves high short-circuit current (J(SC)) values in thick photovoltaic junctions. Here we analyse these solar cells to understand the observed independence of the short-circuit current upon photoactive layer thickness. We employ a range of optoelectronic measurements and analyses, including Mott-Schottky analysis, CELIV, photoinduced absorption spectroscopy, mobility measurements and simulations, to conclude that, the invariant photocurrent for the devices with different active layer thicknesses is associated with the Y6's diffusion length exceeding 300 nm in case of a 300 nm thick cell. This is despite unintentional doping that occurs in PM6 and the associated space-charge effect, which is expected to be even more profound upon photogeneration. This extraordinarily long diffusion length - which is an order of magnitude larger than typical values for organics - dominates transport in the flat-band region of thick junctions. Our work suggests that the performance of the doped PM6:Y6 organic solar cells resembles that of inorganic devices with diffusion transport playing a pivotal role. Ultimately, this is expected to be a key requirement for the fabrication of efficient, high-photocurrent, thick organic solar cells.}, language = {en} } @misc{WolffCanilRehermannetal.2020, author = {Wolff, Christian Michael and Canil, Laura and Rehermann, Carolin and Nguyen, Ngoc Linh and Zu, Fengshuo and Ralaiarisoa, Maryline and Caprioglio, Pietro and Fiedler, Lukas and Stolterfoht, Martin and Kogikoski, Junior, Sergio and Bald, Ilko and Koch, Norbert and Unger, Eva L. and Dittrich, Thomas and Abate, Antonio and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Correction to 'Perfluorinated self-assembled monolayers enhance the stability and efficiency of inverted perovskite solar cells' (2020, 14 (2), 1445-1456)}, series = {ACS nano}, volume = {14}, journal = {ACS nano}, number = {11}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington, DC}, issn = {1936-0851}, doi = {10.1021/acsnano.0c08081}, pages = {16156 -- 16156}, year = {2020}, language = {en} } @article{ZuWolffRalaiarisoaetal.2019, author = {Zu, Fengshuo and Wolff, Christian Michael and Ralaiarisoa, Maryline and Amsalem, Patrick and Neher, Dieter and Koch, Norbert}, title = {Unraveling the Electronic Properties of Lead Halide Perovskites with Surface Photovoltage in Photoemission Studies}, series = {ACS applied materials \& interfaces}, volume = {11}, journal = {ACS applied materials \& interfaces}, number = {24}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1944-8244}, doi = {10.1021/acsami.9b05293}, pages = {21578 -- 21583}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The tremendous success of metal-halide perovskites, especially in the field of photovoltaics, has triggered a substantial number of studies in understanding their optoelectronic properties. However, consensus regarding the electronic properties of these perovskites is lacking due to a huge scatter in the reported key parameters, such as work function (Φ) and valence band maximum (VBM) values. Here, we demonstrate that the surface photovoltage (SPV) is a key phenomenon occurring at the perovskite surfaces that feature a non-negligible density of surface states, which is more the rule than an exception for most materials under study. With ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS) and Kelvin probe, we evidence that even minute UV photon fluxes (500 times lower than that used in typical UPS experiments) are sufficient to induce SPV and shift the perovskite Φ and VBM by several 100 meV compared to dark. By combining UV and visible light, we establish flat band conditions (i.e., compensate the surface-state-induced surface band bending) at the surface of four important perovskites, and find that all are p-type in the bulk, despite a pronounced n-type surface character in the dark. The present findings highlight that SPV effects must be considered in all surface studies to fully understand perovskites' photophysical properties.}, language = {en} } @article{CaprioglioZuWolffetal.2019, author = {Caprioglio, Pietro and Zu, Fengshuo and Wolff, Christian Michael and Prieto, Jose A. Marquez and Stolterfoht, Martin and Becker, Pascal and Koch, Norbert and Unold, Thomas and Rech, Bernd and Albrecht, Steve and Neher, Dieter}, title = {High open circuit voltages in pin-type perovskite solar cells through strontium addition}, series = {Sustainable Energy \& Fuels}, volume = {3}, journal = {Sustainable Energy \& Fuels}, number = {2}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, address = {Cambridge}, issn = {2398-4902}, doi = {10.1039/c8se00509e}, pages = {550 -- 563}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The incorporation of even small amounts of strontium (Sr) into lead-base hybrid quadruple cation perovskite solar cells results in a systematic increase of the open circuit voltage (V-oc) in pin-type perovskite solar cells. We demonstrate via absolute and transient photoluminescence (PL) experiments how the incorporation of Sr significantly reduces the non-radiative recombination losses in the neat perovskite layer. We show that Sr segregates at the perovskite surface, where it induces important changes of morphology and energetics. Notably, the Sr-enriched surface exhibits a wider band gap and a more n-type character, accompanied with significantly stronger surface band bending. As a result, we observe a significant increase of the quasi-Fermi level splitting in the neat perovskite by reduced surface recombination and more importantly, a strong reduction of losses attributed to non-radiative recombination at the interface to the C-60 electron-transporting layer. The resulting solar cells exhibited a V-oc of 1.18 V, which could be further improved to nearly 1.23 V through addition of a thin polymer interlayer, reducing the non-radiative voltage loss to only 110 meV. Our work shows that simply adding a small amount of Sr to the precursor solutions induces a beneficial surface modification in the perovskite, without requiring any post treatment, resulting in high efficiency solar cells with power conversion efficiency (PCE) up to 20.3\%. Our results demonstrate very high V-oc values and efficiencies in Sr-containing quadruple cation perovskite pin-type solar cells and highlight the imperative importance of addressing and minimizing the recombination losses at the interface between perovskite and charge transporting layer.}, language = {en} } @article{HosseiniRolandKurpiersetal.2019, author = {Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad and Roland, Steffen and Kurpiers, Jona and Chen, Zhiming and Zhang, Kai and Huang, Fei and Armin, Ardalan and Neher, Dieter and Shoaee, Safa}, title = {Impact of Bimolecular Recombination on the Fill Factor of Fullerene and Nonfullerene-Based Solar Cells}, series = {The journal of physical chemistry : C, Nanomaterials and interfaces}, volume = {123}, journal = {The journal of physical chemistry : C, Nanomaterials and interfaces}, number = {11}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1932-7447}, doi = {10.1021/acs.jpcc.8b11669}, pages = {6823 -- 6830}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Power conversion efficiencies of donor/acceptor organic solar cells utilizing nonfullerene acceptors have now increased beyond the record of their fullerene-based counterparts. There remain many fundamental questions regarding nanomorphology, interfacial states, charge generation and extraction, and losses in these systems. Herein, we present a comparative study of bulk heterojunction solar cells composed of a recently introduced naphthothiadiazole-based polymer (NT812) as the electron donor and two different acceptor molecules, namely, [6,6]-phenyl-C71-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM)[70] and 3,9-bis(2-methylene-(3-(1,1-dicyanomethylene)-indanone))-5,5,11,11-tetrakis(4-hexylphenyl)-dithieno[2,3-d:2′,3′-d′]-s-indaceno[1,2-b:5,6-b′]dithiophene (ITIC). A comparison between the photovoltaic performance of these two types of solar cells reveals that the open-circuit voltage (Voc) of the NT812:ITIC-based solar cell is larger, but the fill factor (FF) is lower than that of the NT812:PCBM[70] device. We find the key reason behind this reduced FF in the ITIC-based device to be faster nongeminate recombination relative to the NT812:PCBM[70] system.}, language = {en} } @article{RolandKniepertLoveetal.2019, author = {Roland, Steffen and Kniepert, Juliane and Love, John A. and Negi, Vikas and Liu, Feilong and Bobbert, Peter and Melianas, Armantas and Kemerink, Martijn and Hofacker, Andreas and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Equilibrated Charge Carrier Populations Govern Steady-State Nongeminate Recombination in Disordered Organic Solar Cells}, series = {The journal of physical chemistry letters}, volume = {10}, journal = {The journal of physical chemistry letters}, number = {6}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1948-7185}, doi = {10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b00516}, pages = {1374 -- 1381}, year = {2019}, abstract = {We employed bias-assisted charge extraction techniques to investigate the transient and steady-state recombination of photogenerated charge carriers in complete devices of a disordered polymer-fullerene blend. Charge recombination is shown to be dispersive, with a significant slowdown of the recombination rate over time, consistent with the results from kinetic Monte Carlo simulations. Surprisingly, our experiments reveal little to no contributions from early time recombination of nonequilibrated charge carriers to the steady-state recombination properties. We conclude that energetic relaxation of photogenerated carriers outpaces any significant nongeminate recombination under application-relevant illumination conditions. With equilibrated charges dominating the steady-state recombination, quasi-equilibrium concepts appear suited for describing the open-circuit voltage of organic solar cells despite pronounced energetic disorder.}, language = {en} } @article{WangMosconiWolffetal.2019, author = {Wang, Qiong and Mosconi, Edoardo and Wolff, Christian Michael and Li, Junming and Neher, Dieter and De Angelis, Filippo and Suranna, Gian Paolo and Grisorio, Roberto and Abate, Antonio}, title = {Rationalizing the molecular design of hole-selective contacts to improve charge extraction in Perovskite solar cells}, series = {dvanced energy materials}, volume = {9}, journal = {dvanced energy materials}, number = {28}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1614-6832}, doi = {10.1002/aenm.201900990}, pages = {9}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Two new hole selective materials (HSMs) based on dangling methylsulfanyl groups connected to the C-9 position of the fluorene core are synthesized and applied in perovskite solar cells. Being structurally similar to a half of Spiro-OMeTAD molecule, these HSMs (referred as FS and DFS) share similar redox potentials but are endowed with slightly higher hole mobility, due to the planarity and large extension of their structure. Competitive power conversion efficiency (up to 18.6\%) is achieved by using the new HSMs in suitable perovskite solar cells. Time-resolved photoluminescence decay measurements and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy show more efficient charge extraction at the HSM/perovskite interface with respect to Spiro-OMeTAD, which is reflected in higher photocurrents exhibited by DFS/FS-integrated perovskite solar cells. Density functional theory simulations reveal that the interactions of methylammonium with methylsulfanyl groups in DFS/FS strengthen their electrostatic attraction with the perovskite surface, providing an additional path for hole extraction compared to the sole presence of methoxy groups in Spiro-OMeTAD. Importantly, the low-cost synthesis of FS makes it significantly attractive for the future commercialization of perovskite solar cells.}, language = {en} } @article{PisoniStolterfohtLockingeretal.2019, author = {Pisoni, Stefano and Stolterfoht, Martin and Lockinger, Johannes and Moser, Thierry and Jiang, Yan and Caprioglio, Pietro and Neher, Dieter and Buecheler, Stephan and Tiwari, Ayodhya N.}, title = {On the origin of open-circuit voltage losses in flexible n-i-p perovskite solar cells}, series = {Science and technology of advanced materials : STAM}, volume = {20}, journal = {Science and technology of advanced materials : STAM}, publisher = {Taylor \& Francis}, address = {Abingdon}, issn = {1468-6996}, doi = {10.1080/14686996.2019.1633952}, pages = {786 -- 795}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The possibility to manufacture perovskite solar cells (PSCs) at low temperatures paves the way to flexible and lightweight photovoltaic (PV) devices manufactured via high-throughput roll-to-roll processes. In order to achieve higher power conversion efficiencies, it is necessary to approach the radiative limit via suppression of non-radiative recombination losses. Herein, we performed a systematic voltage loss analysis for a typical low-temperature processed, flexible PSC in n-i-p configuration using vacuum deposited C-60 as electron transport layer (ETL) and two-step hybrid vacuum-solution deposition for CH3NH3PbI3 perovskite absorber. We identified the ETL/absorber interface as a bottleneck in relation to non-radiative recombination losses, the quasi-Fermi level splitting (QFLS) decreases from similar to 1.23 eV for the bare absorber, just similar to 90 meV below the radiative limit, to similar to 1.10 eV when C-60 is used as ETL. To effectively mitigate these voltage losses, we investigated different interfacial modifications via vacuum deposited interlayers (BCP, B4PyMPM, 3TPYMB, and LiF). An improvement in QFLS of similar to 30-40 meV is observed after interlayer deposition and confirmed by comparable improvements in the open-circuit voltage after implementation of these interfacial modifications in flexible PSCs. Further investigations on absorber/hole transport layer (HTL) interface point out the detrimental role of dopants in Spiro-OMeTAD film (widely employed HTL in the community) as recombination centers upon oxidation and light exposure. [GRAPHICS] .}, language = {en} } @misc{WolffCaprioglioStolterfohtetal.2019, author = {Wolff, Christian Michael and Caprioglio, Pietro and Stolterfoht, Martin and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Nonradiative recombination in perovskite solar cells}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, number = {772}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-43762}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-437626}, pages = {20}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Perovskite solar cells combine high carrier mobilities with long carrier lifetimes and high radiative efficiencies. Despite this, full devices suffer from significant nonradiative recombination losses, limiting their VOC to values well below the Shockley-Queisser limit. Here, recent advances in understanding nonradiative recombination in perovskite solar cells from picoseconds to steady state are presented, with an emphasis on the interfaces between the perovskite absorber and the charge transport layers. Quantification of the quasi-Fermi level splitting in perovskite films with and without attached transport layers allows to identify the origin of nonradiative recombination, and to explain the VOC of operational devices. These measurements prove that in state-of-the-art solar cells, nonradiative recombination at the interfaces between the perovskite and the transport layers is more important than processes in the bulk or at grain boundaries. Optical pump-probe techniques give complementary access to the interfacial recombination pathways and provide quantitative information on transfer rates and recombination velocities. Promising optimization strategies are also highlighted, in particular in view of the role of energy level alignment and the importance of surface passivation. Recent record perovskite solar cells with low nonradiative losses are presented where interfacial recombination is effectively overcome—paving the way to the thermodynamic efficiency limit.}, language = {en} } @misc{CaprioglioStolterfohtWolffetal.2019, author = {Caprioglio, Pietro and Stolterfoht, Martin and Wolff, Christian Michael and Unold, Thomas and Rech, Bernd and Albrecht, Steve and Neher, Dieter}, title = {On the relation between the open-circuit voltage and quasi-Fermi level splitting in efficient perovskite solar cells}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, number = {774}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-43759}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-437595}, pages = {10}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Today's perovskite solar cells (PSCs) are limited mainly by their open-circuit voltage (VOC) due to nonradiative recombination. Therefore, a comprehensive understanding of the relevant recombination pathways is needed. Here, intensity-dependent measurements of the quasi-Fermi level splitting (QFLS) and of the VOC on the very same devices, including pin-type PSCs with efficiencies above 20\%, are performed. It is found that the QFLS in the perovskite lies significantly below its radiative limit for all intensities but also that the VOC is generally lower than the QFLS, violating one main assumption of the Shockley-Queisser theory. This has far-reaching implications for the applicability of some well-established techniques, which use the VOC as a measure of the carrier densities in the absorber. By performing drift-diffusion simulations, the intensity dependence of the QFLS, the QFLS-VOC offset and the ideality factor are consistently explained by trap-assisted recombination and energetic misalignment at the interfaces. Additionally, it is found that the saturation of the VOC at high intensities is caused by insufficient contact selectivity while heating effects are of minor importance. It is concluded that the analysis of the VOC does not provide reliable conclusions of the recombination pathways and that the knowledge of the QFLS-VOC relation is of great importance.}, language = {en} } @misc{PisoniStolterfohtLockingeretal.2019, author = {Pisoni, Stefano and Stolterfoht, Martin and Lockinger, Johannes and Moser, Thierry and Jiang, Yan and Caprioglio, Pietro and Neher, Dieter and Buecheler, Stephan and Tiwari, Ayodhya N.}, title = {On the origin of open-circuit voltage losses in flexible n-i-p perovskite solar cells}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, number = {1110}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-45961}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-459617}, pages = {12}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The possibility to manufacture perovskite solar cells (PSCs) at low temperatures paves the way to flexible and lightweight photovoltaic (PV) devices manufactured via high-throughput roll-to-roll processes. In order to achieve higher power conversion efficiencies, it is necessary to approach the radiative limit via suppression of non-radiative recombination losses. Herein, we performed a systematic voltage loss analysis for a typical low-temperature processed, flexible PSC in n-i-p configuration using vacuum deposited C-60 as electron transport layer (ETL) and two-step hybrid vacuum-solution deposition for CH3NH3PbI3 perovskite absorber. We identified the ETL/absorber interface as a bottleneck in relation to non-radiative recombination losses, the quasi-Fermi level splitting (QFLS) decreases from similar to 1.23 eV for the bare absorber, just similar to 90 meV below the radiative limit, to similar to 1.10 eV when C-60 is used as ETL. To effectively mitigate these voltage losses, we investigated different interfacial modifications via vacuum deposited interlayers (BCP, B4PyMPM, 3TPYMB, and LiF). An improvement in QFLS of similar to 30-40 meV is observed after interlayer deposition and confirmed by comparable improvements in the open-circuit voltage after implementation of these interfacial modifications in flexible PSCs. Further investigations on absorber/hole transport layer (HTL) interface point out the detrimental role of dopants in Spiro-OMeTAD film (widely employed HTL in the community) as recombination centers upon oxidation and light exposure. [GRAPHICS] .}, language = {en} } @misc{ShoaeeArminStolterfohtetal.2019, author = {Shoaee, Safa and Armin, Ardalan and Stolterfoht, Martin and Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad and Kurpiers, Jona and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Decoding charge recombination through charge generation in organic solar cells}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, number = {773}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-43751}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-437512}, pages = {8}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The in-depth understanding of charge carrier photogeneration and recombination mechanisms in organic solar cells is still an ongoing effort. In donor:acceptor (bulk) heterojunction organic solar cells, charge photogeneration and recombination are inter-related via the kinetics of charge transfer states—being singlet or triplet states. Although high-charge-photogeneration quantum yields are achieved in many donor:acceptor systems, only very few systems show significantly reduced bimolecular recombination relative to the rate of free carrier encounters, in low-mobility systems. This is a serious limitation for the industrialization of organic solar cells, in particular when aiming at thick active layers. Herein, a meta-analysis of the device performance of numerous bulk heterojunction organic solar cells is presented for which field-dependent photogeneration, charge carrier mobility, and fill factor are determined. Herein, a "spin-related factor" that is dependent on the ratio of back electron transfer of the triplet charge transfer (CT) states to the decay rate of the singlet CT states is introduced. It is shown that this factor links the recombination reduction factor to charge-generation efficiency. As a consequence, it is only in the systems with very efficient charge generation and very fast CT dissociation that free carrier recombination is strongly suppressed, regardless of the spin-related factor.}, language = {en} } @article{SchwarzeSchellhammerOrtsteinetal.2019, author = {Schwarze, Martin and Schellhammer, Karl Sebastian and Ortstein, Katrin and Benduhn, Johannes and Gaul, Christopher and Hinderhofer, Alexander and Perdigon-Toro, Lorena and Scholz, Reinhard and Kublitski, Jonas and Roland, Steffen and Lau, Matthias and Poelking, Carl and Andrienko, Denis and Cuniberti, Gianaurelio and Schreiber, Frank and Neher, Dieter and Vandewal, Koen and Ortmann, Frank and Leo, Karl}, title = {Impact of molecular quadrupole moments on the energy levels at organic heterojunctions}, series = {Nature Communications}, volume = {10}, journal = {Nature Communications}, publisher = {Nature Publ. Group}, address = {London}, issn = {2041-1723}, doi = {10.1038/s41467-019-10435-2}, pages = {9}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The functionality of organic semiconductor devices crucially depends on molecular energies, namely the ionisation energy and the electron affinity. Ionisation energy and electron affinity values of thin films are, however, sensitive to film morphology and composition, making their prediction challenging. In a combined experimental and simulation study on zinc-phthalocyanine and its fluorinated derivatives, we show that changes in ionisation energy as a function of molecular orientation in neat films or mixing ratio in blends are proportional to the molecular quadrupole component along the p-p-stacking direction. We apply these findings to organic solar cells and demonstrate how the electrostatic interactions can be tuned to optimise the energy of the charge-transfer state at the donor-acceptor interface and the dissociation barrier for free charge carrier generation. The confirmation of the correlation between interfacial energies and quadrupole moments for other materials indicates its relevance for small molecules and polymers.}, language = {en} } @article{UllbrichBenduhnJiaetal.2019, author = {Ullbrich, Sascha and Benduhn, Johannes and Jia, Xiangkun and Nikolis, Vasileios C. and Tvingstedt, Kristofer and Piersimoni, Fortunato and Roland, Steffen and Liu, Yuan and Wu, Jinhan and Fischer, Axel and Neher, Dieter and Reineke, Sebastian and Spoltore, Donato and Vandewal, Koen}, title = {Emissive and charge-generating donor-acceptor interfaces for organic optoelectronics with low voltage losses}, series = {Nature materials}, volume = {18}, journal = {Nature materials}, number = {5}, publisher = {Nature Publ. Group}, address = {London}, issn = {1476-1122}, doi = {10.1038/s41563-019-0324-5}, pages = {459 -- 464}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Intermolecular charge-transfer states at the interface between electron donating (D) and accepting (A) materials are crucial for the operation of organic solar cells but can also be exploited for organic light-emitting diodes(1,2). Non-radiative charge-transfer state decay is dominant in state-of-the-art D-A-based organic solar cells and is responsible for large voltage losses and relatively low power-conversion efficiencies as well as electroluminescence external quantum yields in the 0.01-0.0001\% range(3,4). In contrast, the electroluminescence external quantum yield reaches up to 16\% in D-A-based organic light-emitting diodes(5-7). Here, we show that proper control of charge-transfer state properties allows simultaneous occurrence of a high photovoltaic and emission quantum yield within a single, visible-light-emitting D-A system. This leads to ultralow-emission turn-on voltages as well as significantly reduced voltage losses upon solar illumination. These results unify the description of the electro-optical properties of charge-transfer states in organic optoelectronic devices and foster the use of organic D-A blends in energy conversion applications involving visible and ultraviolet photons(8-11).}, language = {en} } @article{CaprioglioStolterfohtWolffetal.2019, author = {Caprioglio, Pietro and Stolterfoht, Martin and Wolff, Christian Michael and Unold, Thomas and Rech, Bernd and Albrecht, Steve and Neher, Dieter}, title = {On the relation between the open-circuit voltage and quasi-fermi level splitting in efficient perovskite solar cells}, series = {advanced energy materials}, volume = {9}, journal = {advanced energy materials}, number = {33}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1614-6832}, doi = {10.1002/aenm.201901631}, pages = {10}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Today's perovskite solar cells (PSCs) are limited mainly by their open-circuit voltage (VOC) due to nonradiative recombination. Therefore, a comprehensive understanding of the relevant recombination pathways is needed. Here, intensity-dependent measurements of the quasi-Fermi level splitting (QFLS) and of the VOC on the very same devices, including pin-type PSCs with efficiencies above 20\%, are performed. It is found that the QFLS in the perovskite lies significantly below its radiative limit for all intensities but also that the VOC is generally lower than the QFLS, violating one main assumption of the Shockley-Queisser theory. This has far-reaching implications for the applicability of some well-established techniques, which use the VOC as a measure of the carrier densities in the absorber. By performing drift-diffusion simulations, the intensity dependence of the QFLS, the QFLS-VOC offset and the ideality factor are consistently explained by trap-assisted recombination and energetic misalignment at the interfaces. Additionally, it is found that the saturation of the VOC at high intensities is caused by insufficient contact selectivity while heating effects are of minor importance. It is concluded that the analysis of the VOC does not provide reliable conclusions of the recombination pathways and that the knowledge of the QFLS-VOC relation is of great importance.}, language = {en} } @article{StolterfohtCaprioglioWolffetal.2019, author = {Stolterfoht, Martin and Caprioglio, Pietro and Wolff, Christian Michael and Marquez, Jose A. and Nordmann, Joleik and Zhang, Shanshan and Rothhardt, Daniel and H{\"o}rmann, Ulrich and Amir, Yohai and Redinger, Alex and Kegelmann, Lukas and Zu, Fengshuo and Albrecht, Steve and Koch, Norbert and Kirchartz, Thomas and Saliba, Michael and Unold, Thomas and Neher, Dieter}, title = {The impact of energy alignment and interfacial recombination on the internal and external open-circuit voltage of perovskite solar cells}, series = {Energy \& environmental science}, volume = {12}, journal = {Energy \& environmental science}, number = {9}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, address = {Cambridge}, issn = {1754-5692}, doi = {10.1039/c9ee02020a}, pages = {2778 -- 2788}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Charge transport layers (CTLs) are key components of diffusion controlled perovskite solar cells, however, they can induce additional non-radiative recombination pathways which limit the open circuit voltage (V-OC) of the cell. In order to realize the full thermodynamic potential of the perovskite absorber, both the electron and hole transport layer (ETL/HTL) need to be as selective as possible. By measuring the photoluminescence yield of perovskite/CTL heterojunctions, we quantify the non-radiative interfacial recombination currents in pin- and nip-type cells including high efficiency devices (21.4\%). Our study comprises a wide range of commonly used CTLs, including various hole-transporting polymers, spiro-OMeTAD, metal oxides and fullerenes. We find that all studied CTLs limit the V-OC by inducing an additional non-radiative recombination current that is in most cases substantially larger than the loss in the neat perovskite and that the least-selective interface sets the upper limit for the V-OC of the device. Importantly, the V-OC equals the internal quasi-Fermi level splitting (QFLS) in the absorber layer only in high efficiency cells, while in poor performing devices, the V-OC is substantially lower than the QFLS. Using ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy and differential charging capacitance experiments we show that this is due to an energy level mis-alignment at the p-interface. The findings are corroborated by rigorous device simulations which outline important considerations to maximize the V-OC. This work highlights that the challenge to suppress non-radiative recombination losses in perovskite cells on their way to the radiative limit lies in proper energy level alignment and in suppression of defect recombination at the interfaces.}, language = {en} } @article{KniepertPaulkePerdigonToroetal.2019, author = {Kniepert, Juliane and Paulke, Andreas and Perdigon-Toro, Lorena and Kurpiers, Jona and Zhang, Huotian and Gao, Feng and Yuan, Jun and Zou, Yingping and Le Corre, Vincent M. and Koster, Lambert Jan Anton and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Reliability of charge carrier recombination data determined with charge extraction methods}, series = {Journal of applied physics}, volume = {126}, journal = {Journal of applied physics}, number = {20}, publisher = {American Institute of Physics}, address = {Melville}, issn = {0021-8979}, doi = {10.1063/1.5129037}, pages = {15}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Charge extraction methods are popular for measuring the charge carrier density in thin film organic solar cells and to draw conclusions about the order and coefficient of nongeminate charge recombination. However, results from such studies may be falsified by inhomogeneous steady state carrier profiles or surface recombination. Here, we present a detailed drift-diffusion study of two charge extraction methods, bias-assisted charge extraction (BACE) and time-delayed collection field (TDCF). Simulations are performed over a wide range of the relevant parameters. Our simulations reveal that both charge extraction methods provide reliable information about the recombination order and coefficient if the measurements are performed under appropriate conditions. However, results from BACE measurements may be easily affected by surface recombination, in particular for small active layer thicknesses and low illumination densities. TDCF, on the other hand, is more robust against surface recombination due to its transient nature but also because it allows for a homogeneous high carrier density to be inserted into the active layer. Therefore, TDCF is capable to provide meaningful information on the order and coefficient of recombination even if the model conditions are not exactly fulfilled. We demonstrate this for an only 100 nm thick layer of a highly efficient nonfullerene acceptor (NFA) blend, comprising the donor polymer PM6 and the NFA Y6. TDCF measurements were performed as a function of delay time for different laser fluences and bias conditions. The full set of data could be consistently fitted by a strict second order recombination process, with a bias- and fluence-independent bimolecular recombination coefficient k(2) = 1.7 x 10(-17)m(3) s(-1). BACE measurements performed on the very same layer yielded the identical result, despite the very different excitation conditions. This proves that recombination in this blend is mostly through processes in the bulk and that surface recombination is of minor importance despite the small active layer thickness. Published under license by AIP Publishing.}, language = {en} } @article{NikolisMischokSiegmundetal.2019, author = {Nikolis, Vasileios C. and Mischok, Andreas and Siegmund, Bernhard and Kublitski, Jonas and Jia, Xiangkun and Benduhn, Johannes and H{\"o}rmann, Ulrich and Neher, Dieter and Gather, Malte C. and Spoltore, Donato and Vandewal, Koen}, title = {Strong light-matter coupling for reduced photon energy losses in organic photovoltaics}, series = {Nature Communications}, volume = {10}, journal = {Nature Communications}, publisher = {Nature Publ. Group}, address = {London}, issn = {2041-1723}, doi = {10.1038/s41467-019-11717-5}, pages = {8}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Strong light-matter coupling can re-arrange the exciton energies in organic semiconductors. Here, we exploit strong coupling by embedding a fullerene-free organic solar cell (OSC) photo-active layer into an optical microcavity, leading to the formation of polariton peaks and a red-shift of the optical gap. At the same time, the open-circuit voltage of the device remains unaffected. This leads to reduced photon energy losses for the low-energy polaritons and a steepening of the absorption edge. While strong coupling reduces the optical gap, the energy of the charge-transfer state is not affected for large driving force donor-acceptor systems. Interestingly, this implies that strong coupling can be exploited in OSCs to reduce the driving force for electron transfer, without chemical or microstructural modifications of the photoactive layer. Our work demonstrates that the processes determining voltage losses in OSCs can now be tuned, and reduced to unprecedented values, simply by manipulating the device architecture.}, language = {en} } @article{LeCorreStolterfohtPerdigonToroetal.2019, author = {Le Corre, Vincent M. and Stolterfoht, Martin and Perdig{\´o}n-Toro, Lorena and Feuerstein, Markus and Wolff, Christian Michael and Gil-Escrig, Lidon and Bolink, Henk J. and Neher, Dieter and Koster, L. Jan Anton}, title = {Charge Transport Layers Limiting the Efficiency of Perovskite Solar Cells: How To Optimize Conductivity, Doping, and Thickness}, series = {ACS Applied Energy Materials}, volume = {2}, journal = {ACS Applied Energy Materials}, number = {9}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {2574-0962}, doi = {10.1021/acsaem.9b00856}, pages = {6280 -- 6287}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) are one of the main research topics of the photovoltaic community; with efficiencies now reaching up to 24\%, PSCs are on the way to catching up with classical inorganic solar cells. However, PSCs have not yet reached their full potential. In fact, their efficiency is still limited by nonradiative recombination, mainly via trap-states and by losses due to the poor transport properties of the commonly used transport layers (TLs). Indeed, state-of-the-art TLs (especially if organic) suffer from rather low mobilities, typically within 10(-5) and 10(-2) cm(-2) V-1 s(-1), when compared to the high mobilities, 1-10 cm(-2) V-1 s(-1), measured for perovskites. This work presents a comprehensive analysis of the effect of the mobility, thickness, and doping density of the transport layers based on combined experimental and modeling results of two sets of devices made of a solution-processed high-performing triple-cation (PCE approximate to 20\%). The results are also cross-checked on vacuum-processed MAPbI(3) devices. From this analysis, general guidelines on how to optimize a TL are introduced and especially a new and simple formula to easily calculate the amount of doping necessary to counterbalance the low mobility of the TLs.}, language = {en} } @article{HofmannZuefleShimizuetal.2019, author = {Hofmann, Alexander J. L. and Z{\"u}fle, Simon and Shimizu, Kohei and Schmid, Markus and Wessels, Vivien and J{\"a}ger, Lars and Altazin, Stephane and Ikegami, Keitaro and Khan, Motiur Rahman and Neher, Dieter and Ishii, Hisao and Ruhstaller, Beat and Br{\"u}tting, Wolfgang}, title = {Dipolar Doping of Organic Semiconductors to Enhance Carrier Injection}, series = {Physical review applied}, volume = {12}, journal = {Physical review applied}, number = {6}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, address = {College Park}, issn = {2331-7019}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevApplied.12.064052}, pages = {11}, year = {2019}, abstract = {If not oriented perfectly isotropically, the strong dipole moment of polar organic semiconductor materials such as tris-(8-hydroxyquinolate)aluminum (Alq3) will lead to the buildup of a giant surface potential (GSP) and thus to a macroscopic dielectric polarization of the organic film. Despite this having been a known fact for years, the implications of such high potentials within an organic layer stack have only been studied recently. In this work, the influence of the GSP on hole injection into organic layers is investigated. Therefore, we apply a concept called dipolar doping to devices consisting of the prototypical organic materials N,N′-Di(1-naphthyl)-N,N′-diphenyl-(1,1′-biphenyl)-4,4′-diamine (NPB) as nonpolar host and Alq3 as dipolar dopant with different mixing ratios to tune the GSP. The mixtures are investigated in single-layer monopolar devices as well as bilayer metal/insulator/semiconductor structures. Characterization is done electrically using current-voltage (I-V) characteristics, impedance spectroscopy, and charge extraction by linearly increasing voltage and time of flight, as well as with ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy. We find a maximum in device performance for moderate to low doping concentrations of the polar species in the host. The observed behavior can be described on the basis of the Schottky effect for image-force barrier lowering, if the changes in the interface dipole, the carrier mobility, and the GSP induced by dipolar doping are taken into account.}, language = {en} } @article{ZuAmsalemEggeretal.2019, author = {Zu, Fengshuo and Amsalem, Patrick and Egger, David A. and Wang, Rongbin and Wolff, Christian Michael and Fang, Honghua and Loi, Maria Antonietta and Neher, Dieter and Kronik, Leeor and Duhm, Steffen and Koch, Norbert}, title = {Constructing the Electronic Structure of CH3NH3PbI3 and CH3NH3PbBr3 Perovskite Thin Films from Single-Crystal Band Structure Measurements}, series = {The journal of physical chemistry letters}, volume = {10}, journal = {The journal of physical chemistry letters}, number = {3}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1948-7185}, doi = {10.1021/acs.jpclett.8b03728}, pages = {601 -- 609}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Photovoltaic cells based on halide perovskites, possessing remarkably high power conversion efficiencies have been reported. To push the development of such devices further, a comprehensive and reliable understanding of their electronic properties is essential but presently not available. To provide a solid foundation for understanding the electronic properties of polycrystalline thin films, we employ single-crystal band structure data from angle-resolved photoemission measurements. For two prototypical perovskites (CH3NH3PbBr3 and CH3NH3PbI3), we reveal the band dispersion in two high-symmetry directions and identify the global valence band maxima. With these benchmark data, we construct "standard" photoemission spectra from polycrystalline thin film samples and resolve challenges discussed in the literature for determining the valence band onset with high reliability. Within the framework laid out here, the consistency of relating the energy level alignment in perovskite-based photovoltaic and optoelectronic devices with their functional parameters is substantially enhanced.}, language = {en} } @article{ZhangHosseiniGunderetal.2019, author = {Zhang, Shanshan and Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad and Gunder, Rene and Petsiuk, Andrei and Caprioglio, Pietro and Wolff, Christian Michael and Shoaee, Safa and Meredith, Paul and Schorr, Susan and Unold, Thomas and Burn, Paul L. and Neher, Dieter and Stolterfoht, Martin}, title = {The Role of Bulk and Interface Recombination in High-Efficiency Low-Dimensional Perovskite Solar Cells}, series = {Advanced materials}, volume = {31}, journal = {Advanced materials}, number = {30}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {0935-9648}, doi = {10.1002/adma.201901090}, pages = {11}, year = {2019}, abstract = {2D Ruddlesden-Popper perovskite (RPP) solar cells have excellent environmental stability. However, the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of RPP cells remains inferior to 3D perovskite-based cells. Herein, 2D (CH3(CH2)(3)NH3)(2)(CH3NH3)(n-1)PbnI3n+1 perovskite cells with different numbers of [PbI6](4-) sheets (n = 2-4) are analyzed. Photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY) measurements show that nonradiative open-circuit voltage (V-OC) losses outweigh radiative losses in materials with n > 2. The n = 3 and n = 4 films exhibit a higher PLQY than the standard 3D methylammonium lead iodide perovskite although this is accompanied by increased interfacial recombination at the top perovskite/C-60 interface. This tradeoff results in a similar PLQY in all devices, including the n = 2 system where the perovskite bulk dominates the recombination properties of the cell. In most cases the quasi-Fermi level splitting matches the device V-OC within 20 meV, which indicates minimal recombination losses at the metal contacts. The results show that poor charge transport rather than exciton dissociation is the primary reason for the reduction in fill factor of the RPP devices. Optimized n = 4 RPP solar cells had PCEs of 13\% with significant potential for further improvements.}, language = {en} } @article{KegelmannTockhornWolffetal.2019, author = {Kegelmann, Lukas and Tockhorn, Philipp and Wolff, Christian Michael and M{\´a}rquez, Jos{\´e} A. and Caicedo D{\´a}vila, Sebasti{\´a}n and Korte, Lars and Unold, Thomas and Loevenich, Wilfried and Neher, Dieter and Rech, Bernd and Albrecht, Steve}, title = {Mixtures of Dopant-Free Spiro-OMeTAD and Water-Free PEDOT as a Passivating Hole Contact in Perovskite Solar Cells}, series = {ACS applied materials \& interfaces}, volume = {11}, journal = {ACS applied materials \& interfaces}, number = {9}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1944-8244}, doi = {10.1021/acsami.9b01332}, pages = {9172 -- 9181}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Doped spiro-OMeTAD at present is the most commonly used hole transport material (HTM) in n-i-p-type perovskite solar cells, enabling high efficiencies around 22\%. However, the required dopants were shown to induce nonradiative recombination of charge carriers and foster degradation of the solar cell. Here, in a novel approach, highly conductive and inexpensive water-free poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT) is used to replace these dopants. The resulting spiro-OMeTAD/PEDOT (SpiDOT) mixed films achieve higher lateral conductivities than layers of doped spiro-OMeTAD. Furthermore, combined transient and steady-state photoluminescence studies reveal a passivating effect of PEDOT, suppressing nonradiative recombination losses at the perovskite/HTM interface. This enables excellent quasi-Fermi level splitting values of up to 1.24 eV in perovskite/SpiDOT layer stacks and high open-circuit voltages (V-OC) up to 1.19 V in complete solar cells. Increasing the amount of dopant-free spiro-OMeTAD in SpiDOT layers is shown to enhance hole extraction and thereby improves the fill factor in solar cells. As a consequence, stabilized efficiencies up to 18.7\% are realized, exceeding cells with doped spiro-OMeTAD as a HTM in this study. Moreover, to the best of our knowledge, these results mark the lowest nonradiative recombination loss in the V-OC (140 mV with respect to the Shockley-Queisser limit) and highest efficiency reported so far for perovskite solar cells using PEDOT as a HTM.}, language = {en} } @article{LiBenduhnQiaoetal.2019, author = {Li, Tian-yi and Benduhn, Johannes and Qiao, Zhi and Liu, Yuan and Li, Yue and Shivhare, Rishi and Jaiser, Frank and Wang, Pei and Ma, Jie and Zeika, Olaf and Neher, Dieter and Mannsfeld, Stefan C. B. and Ma, Zaifei and Vandewal, Koen and Leo, Karl}, title = {Effect of H- and J-Aggregation on the Photophysical and Voltage Loss of Boron Dipyrromethene Small Molecules in Vacuum-Deposited Organic Solar Cells}, series = {The journal of physical chemistry letters}, volume = {10}, journal = {The journal of physical chemistry letters}, number = {11}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1948-7185}, doi = {10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b01222}, pages = {2684 -- 2691}, year = {2019}, abstract = {An understanding of the factors limiting the open-circuit voltage (V-oc) and related photon energy loss mechanisms is critical to increase the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of small-molecule organic solar cells (OSCs), especially those with near-infrared (NIR) absorbers. In this work, two NIR boron dipyrromethene (BODIPY) molecules are characterized for application in planar (PHJ) and bulk (BHJ) heterojunction OSCs. When two H atoms are substituted by F atoms on the peripheral phenyl rings of the molecules, the molecular aggregation type in the thin film changes from the H-type to J-type. For PHJ devices, the nonradiative voltage loss of 0.35 V in the J-aggregated BODIPY is lower than that of 0.49 V in the H-aggregated device. In BHJ devices with a nonradiative voltage loss of 0.35 V, a PCE of 5.5\% is achieved with an external quantum efficiency (EQE) maximum of 68\% at 700 nm.}, language = {en} } @article{ColladoFregosoPuglieseWojciketal.2019, author = {Collado-Fregoso, Elisa and Pugliese, Silvina N. and Wojcik, Mariusz and Benduhn, Johannes and Bar-Or, Eyal and Perdigon-Toro, Lorena and H{\"o}rmann, Ulrich and Spoltore, Donato and Vandewal, Koen and Hodgkiss, Justin M. and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Energy-gap law for photocurrent generation in fullerene-based organic solar cells}, series = {Journal of the American Chemical Society}, volume = {141}, journal = {Journal of the American Chemical Society}, number = {6}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {0002-7863}, doi = {10.1021/jacs.8b09820}, pages = {2329 -- 2341}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The involvement of charge-transfer (CT) states in the photogeneration and recombination of charge carriers has been an important focus of study within the organic photovoltaic community. In this work, we investigate the molecular factors determining the mechanism of photocurrent generation in low-donor-content organic solar cells, where the active layer is composed of vacuum-deposited C-60 and small amounts of organic donor molecules. We find a pronounced decline of all photovoltaic parameters with decreasing CT state energy. Using a combination of steady-state photocurrent measurements and time-delayed collection field experiments, we demonstrate that the power conversion efficiency, and more specifically, the fill factor of these devices, is mainly determined by the bias dependence of photocurrent generation. By combining these findings with the results from ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy, we show that blends with small CT energies perform poorly because of an increased nonradiative CT state decay rate and that this decay obeys an energy-gap law. Our work challenges the common view that a large energy offset at the heterojunction and/or the presence of fullerene clusters guarantee efficient CT dissociation and rather indicates that charge generation benefits from high CT state energies through a slower decay to the ground state.}, language = {en} } @article{WuerfelPerdigonToroKurpiersetal.2019, author = {W{\"u}rfel, Uli and Perdigon-Toro, Lorena and Kurpiers, Jona and Wolff, Christian Michael and Caprioglio, Pietro and Rech, Jeromy James and Zhu, Jingshuai and Zhan, Xiaowei and You, Wei and Shoaee, Safa and Neher, Dieter and Stolterfoht, Martin}, title = {Recombination between Photogenerated and Electrode-Induced Charges Dominates the Fill Factor Losses in Optimized Organic Solar Cells}, series = {The journal of physical chemistry letters}, volume = {10}, journal = {The journal of physical chemistry letters}, number = {12}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1948-7185}, doi = {10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b01175}, pages = {3473 -- 3480}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Charge extraction in organic solar cells (OSCs) is commonly believed to be limited by bimolecular recombination of photogenerated charges. However, the fill factor of OSCs is usually almost entirely governed by recombination processes that scale with the first order of the light intensity. This linear loss was often interpreted to be a consequence of geminate or trap-assisted recombination. Numerical simulations show that this linear dependence is a direct consequence of the large amount of excess dark charge near the contact. The first-order losses increase with decreasing mobility of minority carriers, and we discuss the impact of several material and device parameters on this loss mechanism. This work highlights that OSCs are especially vulnerable to injected charges as a result of their poor charge transport properties. This implies that dark charges need to be better accounted for when interpreting electro-optical measurements and charge collection based on simple figures of merit.}, language = {en} } @article{HoermannZeiskeParketal.2019, author = {H{\"o}rmann, Ulrich and Zeiske, Stefan and Park, Soohyung and Schultz, Thorsten and Kickhoefel, Sebastian and Scherf, Ullrich and Blumstengel, Sylke and Koch, Norbert and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Direct observation of state-filling at hybrid tin oxide/organic interfaces}, series = {Applied physics letters}, volume = {114}, journal = {Applied physics letters}, number = {18}, publisher = {American Institute of Physics}, address = {Melville}, issn = {0003-6951}, doi = {10.1063/1.5082704}, pages = {5}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Electroluminescence (EL) spectra of hybrid charge transfer states at metal oxide/organic type-II heterojunctions exhibit bias-induced spectral shifts. The reasons for this phenomenon have been discussed controversially and arguments for either electric field-induced effects or the filling of trap states at the oxide surface have been put forward. Here, we combine the results of EL and photovoltaic measurements to eliminate the unavoidable effect of the series resistance of inorganic and organic components on the total voltage drop across the hybrid device. For SnOx combined with the conjugated polymer [ladder type poly-(para-phenylene)], we find a one-to-one correspondence between the blue-shift of the EL peak and the increase of the quasi-Fermi level splitting at the hybrid heterojunction, which we unambiguously assign to state filling. Our data are resembled best by a model considering the combination of an exponential density of states with a doped semiconductor. Published under license by AIP Publishing.}, language = {en} } @article{DeschlerNeherSchmidtMende2019, author = {Deschler, Felix and Neher, Dieter and Schmidt-Mende, Lukas}, title = {Perovskite semiconductors for next generation optoelectronic applications}, series = {APL Materials}, volume = {7}, journal = {APL Materials}, number = {8}, publisher = {American Institute of Physics}, address = {Melville}, issn = {2166-532X}, doi = {10.1063/1.5119744}, pages = {3}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @article{ShoaeeArminStolterfohtetal.2019, author = {Shoaee, Safa and Armin, Ardalan and Stolterfoht, Martin and Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad and Kurpiers, Jona and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Decoding Charge Recombination through Charge Generation in Organic Solar Cells}, series = {Solar RRL}, volume = {3}, journal = {Solar RRL}, number = {11}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {2367-198X}, doi = {10.1002/solr.201900184}, pages = {8}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The in-depth understanding of charge carrier photogeneration and recombination mechanisms in organic solar cells is still an ongoing effort. In donor:acceptor (bulk) heterojunction organic solar cells, charge photogeneration and recombination are inter-related via the kinetics of charge transfer states-being singlet or triplet states. Although high-charge-photogeneration quantum yields are achieved in many donor:acceptor systems, only very few systems show significantly reduced bimolecular recombination relative to the rate of free carrier encounters, in low-mobility systems. This is a serious limitation for the industrialization of organic solar cells, in particular when aiming at thick active layers. Herein, a meta-analysis of the device performance of numerous bulk heterojunction organic solar cells is presented for which field-dependent photogeneration, charge carrier mobility, and fill factor are determined. Herein, a "spin-related factor" that is dependent on the ratio of back electron transfer of the triplet charge transfer (CT) states to the decay rate of the singlet CT states is introduced. It is shown that this factor links the recombination reduction factor to charge-generation efficiency. As a consequence, it is only in the systems with very efficient charge generation and very fast CT dissociation that free carrier recombination is strongly suppressed, regardless of the spin-related factor.}, language = {en} } @article{StolterfohtLeCorreFeuersteinetal.2019, author = {Stolterfoht, Martin and Le Corre, Vincent M. and Feuerstein, Markus and Caprioglio, Pietro and Koster, Lambert Jan Anton and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Voltage-Dependent Photoluminescence and How It Correlates with the Fill Factor and Open-Circuit Voltage in Perovskite Solar Cells}, series = {Acs energy letters}, volume = {4}, journal = {Acs energy letters}, number = {12}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {2380-8195}, doi = {10.1021/acsenergylett.9b02262}, pages = {2887 -- 2892}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Optimizing the photoluminescence (PL) yield of a solar cell has long been recognized as a key principle to maximize the power conversion efficiency. While PL measurements are routinely applied to perovskite films and solar cells under open circuit conditions (V-OC), it remains unclear how the emission depends on the applied voltage. Here, we performed PL(V) measurements on perovskite cells with different hole transport layer thicknesses and doping concentrations, resulting in remarkably different fill factors (FFs). The results reveal that PL(V) mirrors the current-voltage (JV) characteristics in the power-generating regime, which highlights an interesting correlation between radiative and nonradiative recombination losses. In particular, high FF devices show a rapid quenching of PL(V) from open-circuit to the maximum power point. We conclude that, while the PL has to be maximized at V-OC at lower biases < V-OC the PL must be rapidly quenched as charges need to be extracted prior to recombination.}, language = {en} } @misc{WolffCaprioglioStolterfohtetal.2019, author = {Wolff, Christian Michael and Caprioglio, Pietro and Stolterfoht, Martin and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Nonradiative Recombination in Perovskite Solar Cells}, series = {Advanced materials}, volume = {31}, journal = {Advanced materials}, number = {52}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {0935-9648}, doi = {10.1002/adma.201902762}, pages = {20}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Perovskite solar cells combine high carrier mobilities with long carrier lifetimes and high radiative efficiencies. Despite this, full devices suffer from significant nonradiative recombination losses, limiting their V-OC to values well below the Shockley-Queisser limit. Here, recent advances in understanding nonradiative recombination in perovskite solar cells from picoseconds to steady state are presented, with an emphasis on the interfaces between the perovskite absorber and the charge transport layers. Quantification of the quasi-Fermi level splitting in perovskite films with and without attached transport layers allows to identify the origin of nonradiative recombination, and to explain the V-OC of operational devices. These measurements prove that in state-of-the-art solar cells, nonradiative recombination at the interfaces between the perovskite and the transport layers is more important than processes in the bulk or at grain boundaries. Optical pump-probe techniques give complementary access to the interfacial recombination pathways and provide quantitative information on transfer rates and recombination velocities. Promising optimization strategies are also highlighted, in particular in view of the role of energy level alignment and the importance of surface passivation. Recent record perovskite solar cells with low nonradiative losses are presented where interfacial recombination is effectively overcome-paving the way to the thermodynamic efficiency limit.}, language = {en} } @article{SiniSchubertRiskoetal.2018, author = {Sini, Gjergji and Schubert, Marcel and Risko, Chad and Roland, Steffen and Lee, Olivia P. and Chen, Zhihua and Richter, Thomas V. and Dolfen, Daniel and Coropceanu, Veaceslav and Ludwigs, Sabine and Scherf, Ullrich and Facchetti, Antonio and Frechet, Jean M. J. and Neher, Dieter}, title = {On the Molecular Origin of Charge Separation at the Donor-Acceptor Interface}, series = {Advanced energy materials}, volume = {8}, journal = {Advanced energy materials}, number = {12}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1614-6832}, doi = {10.1002/aenm.201702232}, pages = {15}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Fullerene-based acceptors have dominated organic solar cells for almost two decades. It is only within the last few years that alternative acceptors rival their dominance, introducing much more flexibility in the optoelectronic properties of these material blends. However, a fundamental physical understanding of the processes that drive charge separation at organic heterojunctions is still missing, but urgently needed to direct further material improvements. Here a combined experimental and theoretical approach is used to understand the intimate mechanisms by which molecular structure contributes to exciton dissociation, charge separation, and charge recombination at the donor-acceptor (D-A) interface. Model systems comprised of polythiophene-based donor and rylene diimide-based acceptor polymers are used and a detailed density functional theory (DFT) investigation is performed. The results point to the roles that geometric deformations and direct-contact intermolecular polarization play in establishing a driving force ( energy gradient) for the optoelectronic processes taking place at the interface. A substantial impact for this driving force is found to stem from polymer deformations at the interface, a finding that can clearly lead to new design approaches in the development of the next generation of conjugated polymers and small molecules.}, language = {en} } @article{RanLoveHeiberetal.2018, author = {Ran, Niva A. and Love, John A. and Heiber, Michael C. and Jiao, Xuechen and Hughes, Michael P. and Karki, Akchheta and Wang, Ming and Brus, Viktor V. and Wang, Hengbin and Neher, Dieter and Ade, Harald and Bazan, Guillermo C. and Thuc-Quyen Nguyen,}, title = {Charge generation and recombination in an organic solar cell with low energetic offsets}, series = {dvanced energy materials}, volume = {8}, journal = {dvanced energy materials}, number = {5}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1614-6832}, doi = {10.1002/aenm.201701073}, pages = {12}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Organic bulk heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells require energetic offsets between the donor and acceptor to obtain high short-circuit currents (J(SC)) and fill factors (FF). However, it is necessary to reduce the energetic offsets to achieve high open-circuit voltages (V-OC). Recently, reports have highlighted BHJ blends that are pushing at the accepted limits of energetic offsets necessary for high efficiency. Unfortunately, most of these BHJs have modest FF values. How the energetic offset impacts the solar cell characteristics thus remains poorly understood. Here, a comprehensive characterization of the losses in a polymer:fullerene BHJ blend, PIPCP:phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PC61BM), that achieves a high V-OC (0.9 V) with very low energy losses (E-loss = 0.52 eV) from the energy of absorbed photons, a respectable J(SC) (13 mA cm(-2)), but a limited FF (54\%) is reported. Despite the low energetic offset, the system does not suffer from field-dependent generation and instead it is characterized by very fast nongeminate recombination and the presence of shallow traps. The charge-carrier losses are attributed to suboptimal morphology due to high miscibility between PIPCP and PC61BM. These results hold promise that given the appropriate morphology, the J(SC), V-OC, and FF can all be improved, even with very low energetic offsets.}, language = {en} } @article{ShivhareErdmannHoermannetal.2018, author = {Shivhare, Rishi and Erdmann, Tim and Hoermann, Ulrich and Collado-Fregoso, Elisa and Zeiske, Stefan and Benduhn, Johannes and Ullbrich, Sascha and Huebner, Rene and Hambsch, Mike and Kiriy, Anton and Voit, Brigitte and Neher, Dieter and Vandewal, Koen and Mannsfeld, Stefan C. B.}, title = {Alkyl Branching Position in Diketopyrrolopyrrole Polymers}, series = {Chemistry of materials : a publication of the American Chemical Society}, volume = {30}, journal = {Chemistry of materials : a publication of the American Chemical Society}, number = {19}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {0897-4756}, doi = {10.1021/acs.chemmater.8b02739}, pages = {6801 -- 6809}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP)-based donor acceptor copolymers have gained a significant amount of research interest in the organic electronics community because of their high charge carrier mobilities in organic field-effect transistors (OFETs) and their ability to harvest near-infrared (NIR) photons in solar cells. In this study, we have synthesized four DPP based donor-acceptor copolymers with variations in the donor unit and the branching point of the solubilizing alkyl chains (at the second or sixth carbon position). Grazing incidence wide-angle X-ray scattering (GIWAXS) results suggest that moving the branching point further away from the polymer backbone increases the tendency for aggregation and yields polymer phases with a higher degree of crystallinity (DoC). The polymers were blended with PC70BM and used as active layers in solar cells. A careful analysis of the energetics of the neat polymer and blend films reveals that the charge-transfer state energy (E-CT) of the blend films lies exceptionally close to the singlet energy of the donor (E-D*), indicating near zero electron transfer losses. The difference between the optical gap and open-circuit voltage (V-OC) is therefore determined to be due to rather high nonradiative 418 +/- 13 mV) and unavoidable radiative voltage losses (approximate to 255 +/- 8 mV). Even though the four materials have similar optical gaps, the short-circuit current density (J(SC)) covers a vast span from 7 to 18 mA cm(-2) for the best performing system. Using photoluminescence (PL) quenching and transient charge extraction techniques, we quantify geminate and nongeminate losses and find that fewer excitons reach the donor-acceptor interface in polymers with further away branching points due to larger aggregate sizes. In these material systems, the photogeneration is therefore mainly limited by exciton harvesting efficiency.}, language = {en} } @article{LiBenduhnLietal.2018, author = {Li, Tian-yi and Benduhn, Johannes and Li, Yue and Jaiser, Frank and Spoltore, Donato and Zeika, Olaf and Ma, Zaifei and Neher, Dieter and Vandewal, Koen and Leo, Karl}, title = {Boron dipyrromethene (BODIPY) with meso-perfluorinated alkyl substituents as near infrared donors in organic solar cells}, series = {Journal of materials chemistry : A, Materials for energy and sustainability}, volume = {6}, journal = {Journal of materials chemistry : A, Materials for energy and sustainability}, number = {38}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, address = {Cambridge}, issn = {2050-7488}, doi = {10.1039/c8ta06261g}, pages = {18583 -- 18591}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Three furan-fused BODIPYs were synthesized with perfluorinated methyl, ethyl and n-propyl groups on the meso-carbon. They were obtained with high yields by reacting the furan-fused 2-carboxylpyrrole in corresponding perfluorinated acid and anhydride. With the increase in perfluorinated alkyl chain length, the molecular packing in the single crystal is influenced, showing increasing stacking distance and decreasing slope angle. All the BODIPYs were characterized as intense absorbers in near infrared region in solid state, peaking at similar to 800 nm with absorption coefficient of over 280 000 cm(-1). Facilitated by high thermal stability, the furan-fused BODIPYs were employed in vacuum-deposited organic solar cells as electron donors. All devices exhibit PCE over 6.0\% with the EQE maximum reaching 70\% at similar to 790 nm. The chemical modification of the BODIPY donors have certain influence on the active layer morphology, and the highest PCE of 6.4\% was obtained with a notably high jsc of 13.6 mA cm(-2). Sensitive EQE and electroluminance studies indicated that the energy losses generated by the formation of a charge transfer state and the radiative recombination at the donor-acceptor interface were comparable in the range of 0.14-0.19 V, while non-radiative recombination energy loss of 0.38 V was the main energy loss route resulting in the moderate V-oc of 0.76 V.}, language = {en} } @article{HoermannZeiskePiersimonietal.2018, author = {H{\"o}rmann, Ulrich and Zeiske, Stefan and Piersimoni, Fortunato and Hoffmann, Lukas and Schlesinger, Raphael and Koch, Norbert and Riedl, Thomas and Andrienko, Denis and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Stark effect of hybrid charge transfer states at planar ZnO/organic interfaces}, series = {Physical review : B, Condensed matter and materials physics}, volume = {98}, journal = {Physical review : B, Condensed matter and materials physics}, number = {15}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, address = {College Park}, issn = {2469-9950}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevB.98.155312}, pages = {9}, year = {2018}, abstract = {We investigate the bias dependence of the hybrid charge transfer state emission at planar heterojunctions between the metal oxide acceptor ZnO and three donor molecules. The electroluminescence peak energy linearly increases with the applied bias, saturating at high fields. Variation of the organic layer thickness and deliberate change of the ZnO conductivity through controlled photodoping allow us to confirm that this bias-induced spectral shift relates to the internal electric field in the organic layer rather than the filling of states at the hybrid interface. We show that existing continuum models overestimate the hole delocalization and propose a simple electrostatic model in which the linear and quadratic Stark effects are explained by the electrostatic interaction of a strongly polarizable molecular cation with its mirror image.}, language = {en} } @misc{ShoaeeStolterfohtNeher2018, author = {Shoaee, Safa and Stolterfoht, Martin and Neher, Dieter}, title = {The Role of Mobility on Charge Generation, Recombination, and Extraction in Polymer-Based Solar Cells}, series = {dvanced energy materials}, volume = {8}, journal = {dvanced energy materials}, number = {28}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1614-6832}, doi = {10.1002/aenm.201703355}, pages = {20}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Organic semiconductors are of great interest for a broad range of optoelectronic applications due to their solution processability, chemical tunability, highly scalable fabrication, and mechanical flexibility. In contrast to traditional inorganic semiconductors, organic semiconductors are intrinsically disordered systems and therefore exhibit much lower charge carrier mobilities-the Achilles heel of organic photovoltaic cells. In this progress review, the authors discuss recent important developments on the impact of charge carrier mobility on the charge transfer state dissociation, and the interplay of free charge extraction and recombination. By comparing the mobilities on different timescales obtained by different techniques, the authors highlight the dispersive nature of these materials and how this reflects on the key processes defining the efficiency of organic photovoltaics.}, language = {en} } @article{GorenflotPaulkePiersimonietal.2018, author = {Gorenflot, Julien and Paulke, Andreas and Piersimoni, Fortunato and Wolf, Jannic and Kan, Zhipeng and Cruciani, Federico and El Labban, Abdulrahman and Neher, Dieter and Beaujuge, Pierre M. and Laquai, Frederic}, title = {From recombination dynamics to device performance}, series = {dvanced energy materials}, volume = {8}, journal = {dvanced energy materials}, number = {4}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1614-6832}, doi = {10.1002/aenm.201701678}, pages = {12}, year = {2018}, abstract = {An original set of experimental and modeling tools is used to quantify the yield of each of the physical processes leading to photocurrent generation in organic bulk heterojunction solar cells, enabling evaluation of materials and processing condition beyond the trivial comparison of device performances. Transient absorption spectroscopy, "the" technique to monitor all intermediate states over the entire relevant timescale, is combined with time-delayed collection field experiments, transfer matrix simulations, spectral deconvolution, and parametrization of the charge carrier recombination by a two-pool model, allowing quantification of densities of excitons and charges and extrapolation of their kinetics to device-relevant conditions. Photon absorption, charge transfer, charge separation, and charge extraction are all quantified for two recently developed wide-bandgap donor polymers: poly(4,8-bis((2-ethylhexyl)oxy)benzo[1,2-b:4,5-b′]dithiophene-3,4-difluorothiophene) (PBDT[2F]T) and its nonfluorinated counterpart poly(4,8-bis((2-ethylhexyl)oxy)benzo[1,2-b:4,5-b′]dithiophene-3,4-thiophene) (PBDT[2H]T) combined with PC71BM in bulk heterojunctions. The product of these yields is shown to agree well with the devices' external quantum efficiency. This methodology elucidates in the specific case studied here the origin of improved photocurrents obtained when using PBDT[2F]T instead of PBDT[2H]T as well as upon using solvent additives. Furthermore, a higher charge transfer (CT)-state energy is shown to lead to significantly lower energy losses (resulting in higher VOC) during charge generation compared to P3HT:PCBM.}, language = {en} } @article{AlqahtaniBabicsGorenflotetal.2018, author = {Alqahtani, Obaid and Babics, Maxime and Gorenflot, Julien and Savikhin, Victoria and Ferron, Thomas and Balawi, Ahmed H. and Paulke, Andreas and Kan, Zhipeng and Pope, Michael and Clulow, Andrew J. and Wolf, Jannic and Burn, Paul L. and Gentle, Ian R. and Neher, Dieter and Toney, Michael F. and Laquai, Frederic and Beaujuge, Pierre M. and Collins, Brian A.}, title = {Mixed Domains Enhance Charge Generation and Extraction in Bulk-Heterojunction Solar Cells with Small-Molecule Donors}, series = {Advanced energy materials}, volume = {8}, journal = {Advanced energy materials}, number = {19}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1614-6832}, doi = {10.1002/aenm.201702941}, pages = {16}, year = {2018}, abstract = {The interplay between nanomorphology and efficiency of polymer-fullerene bulk-heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells has been the subject of intense research, but the generality of these concepts for small-molecule (SM) BHJs remains unclear. Here, the relation between performance; charge generation, recombination, and extraction dynamics; and nanomorphology achievable with two SM donors benzo[1,2-b:4,5-b]dithiophene-pyrido[3,4-b]-pyrazine BDT(PPTh2)(2), namely SM1 and SM2, differing by their side-chains, are examined as a function of solution additive composition. The results show that the additive 1,8-diiodooctane acts as a plasticizer in the blends, increases domain size, and promotes ordering/crystallinity. Surprisingly, the system with high domain purity (SM1) exhibits both poor exciton harvesting and severe charge trapping, alleviated only slightly with increased crystallinity. In contrast, the system consisting of mixed domains and lower crystallinity (SM2) shows both excellent exciton harvesting and low charge recombination losses. Importantly, the onset of large, pure crystallites in the latter (SM2) system reduces efficiency, pointing to possible differences in the ideal morphologies for SM-based BHJ solar cells compared with polymer-fullerene devices. In polymer-based systems, tie chains between pure polymer crystals establish a continuous charge transport network, whereas SM-based active layers may in some cases require mixed domains that enable both aggregation and charge percolation to the electrodes.}, language = {en} } @article{ZhangStolterfohtArminetal.2018, author = {Zhang, Shanshan and Stolterfoht, Martin and Armin, Ardalan and Lin, Qianqian and Zu, Fengshuo and Sobus, Jan and Jin, Hui and Koch, Norbert and Meredith, Paul and Burn, Paul L. and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Interface Engineering of Solution-Processed Hybrid Organohalide Perovskite Solar Cells}, series = {ACS applied materials \& interfaces}, volume = {10}, journal = {ACS applied materials \& interfaces}, number = {25}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1944-8244}, doi = {10.1021/acsami.8b02503}, pages = {21681 -- 21687}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Engineering the interface between the perovskite absorber and the charge-transporting layers has become an important method for improving the charge extraction and open-circuit voltage (V-OC) of hybrid perovskite solar cells. Conjugated polymers are particularly suited to form the hole-transporting layer, but their hydrophobicity renders it difficult to solution-process the perovskite absorber on top. Herein, oxygen plasma treatment is introduced as a simple means to change the surface energy and work function of hydrophobic polymer interlayers for use as p-contacts in perovskite solar cells. We find that upon oxygen plasma treatment, the hydrophobic surfaces of different prototypical p-type polymers became sufficiently hydrophilic to enable subsequent perovskite junction processing. In addition, the oxygen plasma treatment also increased the ionization potential of the polymer such that it became closer to the valance band energy of the perovskite. It was also found that the oxygen plasma treatment could increase the electrical conductivity of the p-type polymers, facilitating more efficient charge extraction. On the basis of this concept, inverted MAPbI(3) perovskite devices with different oxygen plasma-treated polymers such as P3HT, P3OT, polyTPD, or PTAA were fabricated with power conversion efficiencies of up to 19\%.}, language = {en} } @article{SalibaCorreaBaenaWolffetal.2018, author = {Saliba, Michael and Correa-Baena, Juan-Pablo and Wolff, Christian Michael and Stolterfoht, Martin and Phung, Thi Thuy Nga and Albrecht, Steve and Neher, Dieter and Abate, Antonio}, title = {How to Make over 20\% Efficient Perovskite Solar Cells in Regular (n-i-p) and Inverted (p-i-n) Architectures}, series = {Chemistry of materials : a publication of the American Chemical Society}, volume = {30}, journal = {Chemistry of materials : a publication of the American Chemical Society}, number = {13}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {0897-4756}, doi = {10.1021/acs.chemmater.8b00136}, pages = {4193 -- 4201}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) are currently one of the most promising photovoltaic technologies for highly efficient and cost-effective solar energy production. In only a few years, an unprecedented progression of preparation procedures and material compositions delivered lab-scale devices that have now reached record power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) higher than 20\%, competing with most established solar cell materials such as silicon, CIGS, and CdTe. However, despite a large number of researchers currently involved in this topic, only a few groups in the world can reproduce >20\% efficiencies on a regular n-i-p architecture. In this work, we present detailed protocols for preparing PSCs in regular (n-i-p) and inverted (p-i-n) architectures with >= 20\% PCE. We aim to provide a comprehensive, reproducible description of our device fabrication , protocols. We encourage the practice of reporting detailed and transparent protocols that can be more easily reproduced by other laboratories. A better reporting standard may, in turn, accelerate the development of perovskite solar cells and related research fields.}, language = {en} } @article{KurpiersFerronRolandetal.2018, author = {Kurpiers, Jona and Ferron, Thomas and Roland, Steffen and Jakoby, Marius and Thiede, Tobias and Jaiser, Frank and Albrecht, Steve and Janietz, Silvia and Collins, Brian A. and Howard, Ian A. and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Probing the pathways of free charge generation in organic bulk heterojunction solar cells}, series = {Nature Communications}, volume = {9}, journal = {Nature Communications}, publisher = {Nature Publ. Group}, address = {London}, issn = {2041-1723}, doi = {10.1038/s41467-018-04386-3}, pages = {11}, year = {2018}, abstract = {The fact that organic solar cells perform efficiently despite the low dielectric constant of most photoactive blends initiated a long-standing debate regarding the dominant pathways of free charge formation. Here, we address this issue through the accurate measurement of the activation energy for free charge photogeneration over a wide range of photon energy, using the method of time-delayed collection field. For our prototypical low bandgap polymer:fullerene blends, we find that neither the temperature nor the field dependence of free charge generation depend on the excitation energy, ruling out an appreciable contribution to free charge generation though hot carrier pathways. On the other hand, activation energies are on the order of the room temperature thermal energy for all studied blends. We conclude that charge generation in such devices proceeds through thermalized charge transfer states, and that thermal energy is sufficient to separate most of these states into free charges.}, language = {en} } @misc{SalibaStolterfohtWolffetal.2018, author = {Saliba, Michael and Stolterfoht, Martin and Wolff, Christian Michael and Neher, Dieter and Abate, Antonio}, title = {Measuring aging stability of perovskite solar cells}, series = {Joule}, volume = {2}, journal = {Joule}, number = {6}, publisher = {Cell Press}, address = {Cambridge}, issn = {2542-4351}, doi = {10.1016/j.joule.2018.05.005}, pages = {1019 -- 1024}, year = {2018}, language = {en} } @article{BraungerMundtWolffetal.2018, author = {Braunger, Steffen and Mundt, Laura E. and Wolff, Christian Michael and Mews, Mathias and Rehermann, Carolin and Jost, Marko and Tejada, Alvaro and Eisenhauer, David and Becker, Christiane and Andres Guerra, Jorge and Unger, Eva and Korte, Lars and Neher, Dieter and Schubert, Martin C. and Rech, Bernd and Albrecht, Steve}, title = {Cs(x)FA(1-x)Pb(l(1-y)Br(y))(3) Perovskite Compositions}, series = {The journal of physical chemistry : C, Nanomaterials and interfaces}, volume = {122}, journal = {The journal of physical chemistry : C, Nanomaterials and interfaces}, number = {30}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1932-7447}, doi = {10.1021/acs.jpcc.8b06459}, pages = {17123 -- 17135}, year = {2018}, abstract = {We report on the formation of wrinkle-patterned surface morphologies in cesium formamidinium-based Cs(x)FA(1-y)Pb(I1-yBry)(3) perovskite compositions with x = 0-0.3 and y = 0-0.3 under various spin-coating conditions. By varying the Cs and Br contents, the perovskite precursor solution concentration and the spin-coating procedure, the occurrence and characteristics of the wrinkle-shaped morphology can be tailored systematically. Cs(0.17)FA(0.83)Pb(I0.83Br0.17)(3) perovskite layers were analyzed regarding their surface roughness, microscopic structure, local and overall composition, and optoelectronic properties. Application of these films in p-i-n perovskite solar cells (PSCs) with indium-doped tin oxide/NiOx/perovskite/C-60/bathocuproine/Cu architecture resulted in up to 15.3 and 17.0\% power conversion efficiency for the flat and wrinkled morphology, respectively. Interestingly, we find slightly red-shifted photoluminescence (PL) peaks for wrinkled areas and we are able to directly correlate surface topography with PL peak mapping. This is attributed to differences in the local grain size, whereas there is no indication for compositional demixing in the films. We show that the perovskite composition, crystallization kinetics, and layer thickness strongly influence the formation of wrinkles which is proposed to be related to the release of compressive strain during perovskite crystallization. Our work helps us to better understand film formation and to further improve the efficiency of PSCs with widely used mixed-perovskite compositions.}, language = {en} } @article{BenduhnPiersimoniLondietal.2018, author = {Benduhn, Johannes and Piersimoni, Fortunato and Londi, Giacomo and Kirch, Anton and Widmer, Johannes and Koerner, Christian and Beljonne, David and Neher, Dieter and Spoltore, Donato and Vandewal, Koen}, title = {Impact of triplet excited states on the open-circuit voltage of organic solar cells}, series = {dvanced energy materials}, volume = {8}, journal = {dvanced energy materials}, number = {21}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1614-6832}, doi = {10.1002/aenm.201800451}, pages = {7}, year = {2018}, abstract = {The best organic solar cells (OSCs) achieve comparable peak external quantum efficiencies and fill factors as conventional photovoltaic devices. However, their voltage losses are much higher, in particular those due to nonradiative recombination. To investigate the possible role of triplet states on the donor or acceptor materials in this process, model systems comprising Zn- and Cu-phthalocyanine (Pc), as well as fluorinated versions of these donors, combined with C-60 as acceptor are studied. Fluorination allows tuning the energy level alignment between the lowest energy triplet state (T-1) and the charge-transfer (CT) state, while the replacement of Zn by Cu as the central metal in the Pcs leads to a largely enhanced spin-orbit coupling. Only in the latter case, a substantial influence of the triplet state on the nonradiative voltage losses is observed. In contrast, it is found that for a large series of typical OSC materials, the relative energy level alignment between T-1 and the CT state does not substantially affect nonradiative voltage losses.}, language = {en} } @article{StolterfohtWolffMarquezetal.2018, author = {Stolterfoht, Martin and Wolff, Christian Michael and Marquez, Jose A. and Zhang, Shanshan and Hages, Charles J. and Rothhardt, Daniel and Albrecht, Steve and Burn, Paul L. and Meredith, Paul and Unold, Thomas and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Visualization and suppression of interfacial recombination for high-efficiency large-area pin perovskite solar cells}, series = {Nature Energy}, volume = {3}, journal = {Nature Energy}, number = {10}, publisher = {Nature Publ. Group}, address = {London}, issn = {2058-7546}, doi = {10.1038/s41560-018-0219-8}, pages = {847 -- 854}, year = {2018}, abstract = {The performance of perovskite solar cells is predominantly limited by non-radiative recombination, either through trap-assisted recombination in the absorber layer or via minority carrier recombination at the perovskite/transport layer interfaces. Here, we use transient and absolute photoluminescence imaging to visualize all non-radiative recombination pathways in planar pintype perovskite solar cells with undoped organic charge transport layers. We find significant quasi-Fermi-level splitting losses (135 meV) in the perovskite bulk, whereas interfacial recombination results in an additional free energy loss of 80 meV at each individual interface, which limits the open-circuit voltage (V-oc) of the complete cell to similar to 1.12 V. Inserting ultrathin interlayers between the perovskite and transport layers leads to a substantial reduction of these interfacial losses at both the p and n contacts. Using this knowledge and approach, we demonstrate reproducible dopant-free 1 cm(2) perovskite solar cells surpassing 20\% efficiency (19.83\% certified) with stabilized power output, a high V-oc (1.17 V) and record fill factor (>81\%).}, language = {en} } @article{SchubertFrischAllardetal.2017, author = {Schubert, Marcel and Frisch, Johannes and Allard, Sybille and Preis, Eduard and Scherf, Ullrich and Koch, Norbert and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Tuning side chain and main chain order in a prototypical donor-acceptor copolymer}, series = {Elementary Processes in Organic Photovoltaics}, volume = {272}, journal = {Elementary Processes in Organic Photovoltaics}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Berlin}, isbn = {978-3-319-28338-8}, issn = {0065-3195}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-28338-8_10}, pages = {243 -- 265}, year = {2017}, abstract = {The recent development of donor-acceptor copolymers has led to an enormous improvement in the performance of organic solar cells and organic field-effect transistors. Here we describe the synthesis, detailed characterisation, and application of a series of structurally modified copolymers to investigate fundamental structure-property relationships in this class of conjugated polymers. The interplay between chemical structure and optoelectronic properties is investigated. These are further correlated to the charge transport and solar cell performance, which allows us to link their chemical structure to the observed physical properties.}, language = {en} } @misc{LaquaiAndrienkoDeibeletal.2017, author = {Laquai, Frederic and Andrienko, Denis and Deibel, Carsten and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Charge carrier generation, recombination, and extraction in polymer-fullerene bulk heterojunction organic solar cells}, series = {Elementary processes in organic photovoltaics}, volume = {272}, journal = {Elementary processes in organic photovoltaics}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Berlin}, isbn = {978-3-319-28338-8}, issn = {0065-3195}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-28338-8_11}, pages = {267 -- 291}, year = {2017}, abstract = {In this chapter we review the basic principles of photocurrent generation in bulk heterojunction organic solar cells, discuss the loss channels limiting their efficiency, and present case studies of several polymer-fullerene blends. Using steady-state and transient, optical, and electrooptical techniques, we create a precise picture of the fundamental processes that ultimately govern solar cell efficiency.}, language = {en} } @article{HofackerNeher2017, author = {Hofacker, Andreas and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Dispersive and steady-state recombination in organic disordered semiconductors}, series = {Physical review : B, Condensed matter and materials physics}, volume = {96}, journal = {Physical review : B, Condensed matter and materials physics}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, address = {College Park}, issn = {2469-9950}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevB.96.245204}, pages = {11}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Charge carrier recombination in organic disordered semiconductors is strongly influenced by the thermalization of charge carriers in the density of states (DOS). Measurements of recombination dynamics, conducted under transient or steady-state conditions, can easily be misinterpreted when a detailed understanding of the interplay of thermalization and recombination is missing. To enable adequate measurement analysis, we solve the multiple-trapping problem for recombining charge carriers and analyze it in the transient and steady excitation paradigm for different DOS distributions. We show that recombination rates measured after pulsed excitation are inherently time dependent since recombination gradually slows down as carriers relax in the DOS. When measuring the recombination order after pulsed excitation, this leads to an apparent high-order recombination at short times. As times goes on, the recombination order approaches an asymptotic value. For the Gaussian and the exponential DOS distributions, this asymptotic value equals the recombination order of the equilibrated system under steady excitation. For a more general DOS distribution, the recombination order can also depend on the carrier density, under both transient and steady-state conditions. We conclude that transient experiments can provide rich information about recombination in and out of equilibrium and the underlying DOS occupation provided that consistent modeling of the system is performed.}, language = {en} } @article{HofackerNeher2017, author = {Hofacker, Andreas and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Dispersive and steady-state recombination in organic disordered semiconductors}, series = {Physical review : B, Condensed matter and materials physics}, volume = {96}, journal = {Physical review : B, Condensed matter and materials physics}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, address = {College Park}, issn = {2469-9950}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevB.96.245204}, pages = {5640 -- 5649}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Charge carrier recombination in organic disordered semiconductors is strongly influenced by the thermalization of charge carriers in the density of states (DOS). Measurements of recombination dynamics, conducted under transient or steady-state conditions, can easily be misinterpreted when a detailed understanding of the interplay of thermalization and recombination is missing. To enable adequate measurement analysis, we solve the multiple-trapping problem for recombining charge carriers and analyze it in the transient and steady excitation paradigm for different DOS distributions. We show that recombination rates measured after pulsed excitation are inherently time dependent since recombination gradually slows down as carriers relax in the DOS. When measuring the recombination order after pulsed excitation, this leads to an apparent high-order recombination at short times. As times goes on, the recombination order approaches an asymptotic value. For the Gaussian and the exponential DOS distributions, this asymptotic value equals the recombination order of the equilibrated system under steady excitation. For a more general DOS distribution, the recombination order can also depend on the carrier density, under both transient and steady-state conditions. We conclude that transient experiments can provide rich information about recombination in and out of equilibrium and the underlying DOS occupation provided that consistent modeling of the system is performed.}, language = {en} } @article{NikolisBenduhnHolzmuelleretal.2017, author = {Nikolis, Vasileios C. and Benduhn, Johannes and Holzmueller, Felix and Piersimoni, Fortunato and Lau, Matthias and Zeika, Olaf and Neher, Dieter and Koerner, Christian and Spoltore, Donato and Vandewal, Koen}, title = {Reducing Voltage Losses in Cascade Organic Solar Cells while Maintaining High External Quantum Efficiencies}, series = {dvanced energy materials}, volume = {7}, journal = {dvanced energy materials}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1614-6832}, doi = {10.1002/aenm.201700855}, pages = {122 -- 136}, year = {2017}, abstract = {High photon energy losses limit the open-circuit voltage (V-OC) and power conversion efficiency of organic solar cells (OSCs). In this work, an optimization route is presented which increases the V-OC by reducing the interfacial area between donor (D) and acceptor (A). This optimization route concerns a cascade device architecture in which the introduction of discontinuous interlayers between alpha-sexithiophene (alpha-6T) (D) and chloroboron subnaphthalocyanine (SubNc) (A) increases the V-OC of an alpha-6T/SubNc/SubPc fullerene-free cascade OSC from 0.98 V to 1.16 V. This increase of 0.18 V is attributed solely to the suppression of nonradiative recombination at the D-A interface. By accurately measuring the optical gap (E-opt) and the energy of the charge-transfer state (E-CT) of the studied OSC, a detailed analysis of the overall voltage losses is performed. E-opt - qV(OC) losses of 0.58 eV, which are among the lowest observed for OSCs, are obtained. Most importantly, for the V-OC-optimized devices, the low-energy (700 nm) external quantum efficiency (EQE) peak remains high at 79\%, despite a minimal driving force for charge separation of less than 10 meV. This work shows that low-voltage losses can be combined with a high EQE in organic photovoltaic devices.}, language = {en} } @article{LoveFeuersteinWolffetal.2017, author = {Love, John A. and Feuerstein, Markus and Wolff, Christian Michael and Facchetti, Antonio and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Lead Halide Perovskites as Charge Generation Layers for Electron Mobility Measurement in Organic Semiconductors}, series = {ACS applied materials \& interfaces}, volume = {9}, journal = {ACS applied materials \& interfaces}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1944-8244}, doi = {10.1021/acsami.7b10361}, pages = {42011 -- 42019}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Hybrid lead halide perovskites are introduced as charge generation layers (CGLs) for the accurate determination of electron mobilities in thin organic semiconductors. Such hybrid perovskites have become a widely studied photovoltaic material in their own right, for their high efficiencies, ease of processing from solution, strong absorption, and efficient photogeneration of charge. Time-of-flight (ToF) measurements on bilayer samples consisting of the perovskite CGL and an organic semiconductor layer of different thickness are shown to be determined by the carrier motion through the organic material, consistent with the much higher charge carrier mobility in the perovskite. Together with the efficient photon-to-electron conversion in the perovskite, this high mobility imbalance enables electron-only mobility measurement on relatively thin application-relevant organic films, which would not be possible with traditional ToF measurements. This architecture enables electron-selective mobility measurements in single components as well as bulk-heterojunction films as demonstrated in the prototypical polymer/fullerene blends. To further demonstrate the potential of this approach, electron mobilities were measured as a function of electric field and temperature in an only 127 nm thick layer of a prototypical electron-transporting perylene diimide-based polymer, and found to be consistent with an exponential trap distribution of ca. 60 meV. Our study furthermore highlights the importance of high mobility charge transporting layers when designing perovskite solar cells.}, language = {en} } @article{DiPietroErdmannCarpenteretal.2017, author = {Di Pietro, Riccardo and Erdmann, Tim and Carpenter, Joshua H. and Wang, Naixiang and Shivhare, Rishi Ramdas and Formanek, Petr and Heintze, Cornelia and Voit, Brigitte and Neher, Dieter and Ade, Harald W. and Kiriy, Anton}, title = {Synthesis of High-Crystallinity DPP Polymers with Balanced Electron and Hole Mobility}, series = {Chemistry of materials : a publication of the American Chemical Society}, volume = {29}, journal = {Chemistry of materials : a publication of the American Chemical Society}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {0897-4756}, doi = {10.1021/acs.chemmater.7b04423}, pages = {10220 -- 10232}, year = {2017}, language = {en} } @article{JoštAlbrechtKegelmannetal.2017, author = {Jošt, Marko and Albrecht, Steve and Kegelmann, Lukas and Wolff, Christian Michael and Lang, Felix and Lipovšek, Benjamin and Krč, Janez and Korte, Lars and Neher, Dieter and Rech, Bernd and Topič, Marko}, title = {Efficient light management by textured nanoimprinted layers for perovskite solar cells}, series = {ACS photonics}, volume = {4}, journal = {ACS photonics}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {2330-4022}, doi = {10.1021/acsphotonics.7b00138}, pages = {1232 -- 1239}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Inorganic-organic perovskites like methylammonium-lead-iodide have proven to be an effective class of 17 materials for fabricating efficient solar cells. To improve their performance, light management techniques using textured surfaces, similar to those used in established solar cell technologies, should be considered. Here, we apply a light management foil created by UV nanoimprint lithography on the glass side of an inverted (p-i-n) perovskite solar cell with 16.3\% efficiency. The obtained 1 mA cm(-2) increase in the short-circuit current density translates to a relative improvement in cell performance of 5\%, which results in a power conversion efficiency of 17.1\%. Optical 3D simulations based on experimentally obtained parameters were used to support the experimental findings. A good match between the simulated and experimental data was obtained, validating the model. Optical simulations reveal that the main improvement in device performance is due to a reduction in total reflection and that relative improvement in the short-circuit current density of up to 10\% is possible for large-area devices. Therefore, our results present the potential of light management foils for improving the device performance of perovskite solar cells and pave the way for further use of optical simulations in the field of perovskite solar cells.}, language = {en} } @article{ColladoFregosoHoodShoaeeetal.2017, author = {Collado-Fregoso, Elisa and Hood, Samantha N. and Shoaee, Safa and Schr{\"o}der, Bob C. and McCulloch, Iain and Kassal, Ivan and Neher, Dieter and Durrant, James R.}, title = {Intercalated vs Nonintercalated Morphologies in Donor-Acceptor Bulk Heterojunction Solar Cells: PBTTT:Fullerene Charge Generation and Recombination Revisited}, series = {The journal of physical chemistry letters}, volume = {8}, journal = {The journal of physical chemistry letters}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1948-7185}, doi = {10.1021/acs.jpclett.7b01571}, pages = {4061 -- 4068}, year = {2017}, abstract = {In this Letter, we study the role of the donor:acceptor interface nanostructure upon charge separation and recombination in organic photovoltaic devices and blend films, using mixtures of PBTTT and two different fullerene derivatives (PC70BM and ICTA) as models for intercalated and nonintercalated morphologies, respectively. Thermodynamic simulations show that while the completely intercalated system exhibits a large free-energy barrier for charge separation, this barrier is significantly lower in the nonintercalated system and almost vanishes when energetic disorder is included in the model. Despite these differences, both femtosecond-resolved transient absorption spectroscopy (TAS) and time-delayed collection field (TDCF) exhibit extensive first-order losses in both systems, suggesting that geminate pairs are the primary product of photoexcitation. In contrast, the system that comprises a combination of fully intercalated polymer:fullerene areas and fullerene-aggregated domains (1:4 PBTTT:PC70BM) is the only one that shows slow, second-order recombination of free charges, resulting in devices with an overall higher short-circuit current and fill factor. This study therefore provides a novel consideration of the role of the interfacial nanostructure and the nature of bound charges and their impact upon charge generation and recombination.}, language = {en} } @article{RolandYanZhangetal.2017, author = {Roland, Steffen and Yan, Liang and Zhang, Qianqian and Jiao, Xuechen and Hunt, Adrian and Ghasemi, Masoud and Ade, Harald and You, Wei and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Charge Generation and Mobility-Limited Performance of Bulk Heterojunction Solar Cells with a Higher Adduct Fullerene}, series = {The journal of physical chemistry : C, Nanomaterials and interfaces}, volume = {121}, journal = {The journal of physical chemistry : C, Nanomaterials and interfaces}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1932-7447}, doi = {10.1021/acs.jpcc.7b02288}, pages = {10305 -- 10316}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Alternative electron acceptors are being actively explored in order to advance the development of bulk-heterojunction (BHJ) organic solar cells (OSCs). The indene-C-60 bisadduct (ICBA) has been regarded as a promising candidate, as it provides high open-circuit voltage in BHJ solar cells; however, the photovoltaic performance of such ICBA-based devices is often inferior when compared to cells with the omnipresent PCBM electron acceptor. Here, by pairing the high performance polymer (FTAZ) as the donor with either PCBM or ICBA as the acceptor, we explore the physical mechanism behind the reduced performance of the ICBA-based device. Time delayed collection field (TDCF) experiments reveal reduced, yet field-independent free charge generation in the FTAZ:ICBA system, explaining the overall lower photocurrent in its cells. Through the analysis of the photoluminescence, photogeneration, and electroluminescence, we find that the lower generation efficiency is neither caused by inefficient exciton splitting, nor do we find evidence for significant energy back-transfer from the CT state to singlet excitons. In fact, the increase in open circuit voltage when replacing PCBM by ICBA is entirely caused by the increase in the CT energy, related to the shift in the LUMO energy, while changes in the radiative and nonradiative recombination losses are nearly absent. On the other hand, space charge limited current (SCLC) and bias-assisted charge extraction (BACE) measurements consistently reveal a severely lower electron mobilitiy in the FTAZ:ICBA blend. Studies of the blends with resonant soft X-ray scattering (R-SoXS), grazing incident wide-angle X-ray scattering (GIWAXS), and scanning transmission X-ray microscopy (STXM) reveal very little differences in the mesoscopic morphology but significantly less nanoscale molecular ordering of the fullerene domains in the ICBA based blends, which we propose as the main cause for the lower generation efficiency and smaller electron mobility. Calculations of the JV curves with an analytical model, using measured values, show good agreement with the experimentally determined JV characteristics, proving that these devices suffer from slow carrier extraction, resulting in significant bimolecular recombination losses. Therefore, this study highlights the importance of high charge carrier mobility for newly synthesized acceptor materials, in addition to having suitable energy levels.}, language = {en} } @article{ChenSavateevPronkinetal.2017, author = {Chen, Zupeng and Savateev, Aleksandr and Pronkin, Sergey and Papaefthimiou, Vasiliki and Wolff, Christian Michael and Willinger, Marc Georg and Willinger, Elena and Neher, Dieter and Antonietti, Markus and Dontsova, Dariya}, title = {"The Easier the Better" Preparation of Efficient Photocatalysts-Metastable Poly(heptazine imide) Salts}, series = {Advanced materials}, volume = {29}, journal = {Advanced materials}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {0935-9648}, doi = {10.1002/adma.201700555}, pages = {21800 -- 21806}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Cost-efficient, visible-light-driven hydrogen production from water is an attractive potential source of clean, sustainable fuel. Here, it is shown that thermal solid state reactions of traditional carbon nitride precursors (cyanamide, melamine) with NaCl, KCl, or CsCl are a cheap and straightforward way to prepare poly(heptazine imide) alkali metal salts, whose thermodynamic stability decreases upon the increase of the metal atom size. The chemical structure of the prepared salts is confirmed by the results of X-ray photoelectron and infrared spectroscopies, powder X-ray diffraction and electron microscopy studies, and, in the case of sodium poly(heptazine imide), additionally by atomic pair distribution function analysis and 2D powder X-ray diffraction pattern simulations. In contrast, reactions with LiCl yield thermodynamically stable poly(triazine imides). Owing to the metastability and high structural order, the obtained heptazine imide salts are found to be highly active photo-catalysts in Rhodamine B and 4-chlorophenol degradation, and Pt-assisted sacrificial water reduction reactions under visible light irradiation. The measured hydrogen evolution rates are up to four times higher than those provided by a benchmark photocatalyst, mesoporous graphitic carbon nitride. Moreover, the products are able to photocatalytically reduce water with considerable reaction rates, even when glycerol is used as a sacrificial hole scavenger.}, language = {en} } @article{RanRolandLoveetal.2017, author = {Ran, Niva A. and Roland, Steffen and Love, John A. and Savikhin, Victoria and Takacs, Christopher J. and Fu, Yao-Tsung and Li, Hong and Coropceanu, Veaceslav and Liu, Xiaofeng and Bredas, Jean-Luc and Bazan, Guillermo C. and Toney, Michael F. and Neher, Dieter and Thuc-Quyen Nguyen,}, title = {Impact of interfacial molecular orientation on radiative recombination and charge generation efficiency}, series = {Nature Communications}, volume = {8}, journal = {Nature Communications}, publisher = {Nature Publ. Group}, address = {London}, issn = {2041-1723}, doi = {10.1038/s41467-017-00107-4}, pages = {9}, year = {2017}, abstract = {A long standing question in organic electronics concerns the effects of molecular orientation at donor/acceptor heterojunctions. Given a well-controlled donor/acceptor bilayer system, we uncover the genuine effects of molecular orientation on charge generation and recombination. These effects are studied through the point of view of photovoltaics-however, the results have important implications on the operation of all optoelectronic devices with donor/ acceptor interfaces, such as light emitting diodes and photodetectors. Our findings can be summarized by two points. First, devices with donor molecules face-on to the acceptor interface have a higher charge transfer state energy and less non-radiative recombination, resulting in larger open-circuit voltages and higher radiative efficiencies. Second, devices with donor molecules edge-on to the acceptor interface are more efficient at charge generation, attributed to smaller electronic coupling between the charge transfer states and the ground state, and lower activation energy for charge generation.}, language = {en} } @article{WolffZuPaulkeetal.2017, author = {Wolff, Christian Michael and Zu, Fengshuo and Paulke, Andreas and Perdigon-Toro, Lorena and Koch, Norbert and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Reduced Interface-Mediated Recombination for High Open-Circuit Voltages in CH3NH3PbI3 Solar Cells}, series = {Advanced materials}, volume = {29}, journal = {Advanced materials}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {0935-9648}, doi = {10.1002/adma.201700159}, pages = {8}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Perovskite solar cells with all-organic transport layers exhibit efficiencies rivaling their counterparts that employ inorganic transport layers, while avoiding high-temperature processing. Herein, it is investigated how the choice of the fullerene derivative employed in the electron-transporting layer of inverted perovskite cells affects the open-circuit voltage (V-OC). It is shown that nonradiative recombination mediated by the electron-transporting layer is the limiting factor for the V-OC in the cells. By inserting an ultrathin layer of an insulating polymer between the active CH3NH3PbI3 perovskite and the fullerene, an external radiative efficiency of up to 0.3\%, a V-OC as high as 1.16 V, and a power conversion efficiency of 19.4\% are realized. The results show that the reduction of nonradiative recombination due to charge-blocking at the perovskite/organic interface is more important than proper level alignment in the search for ideal selective contacts toward high V-OC and efficiency.}, language = {en} } @article{KegelmannWolffAwinoetal.2017, author = {Kegelmann, Lukas and Wolff, Christian Michael and Awino, Celline and Lang, Felix and Unger, Eva L. and Korte, Lars and Dittrich, Thomas and Neher, Dieter and Rech, Bernd and Albrecht, Steve}, title = {It Takes Two to Tango-Double-Layer Selective Contacts in Perovskite Solar Cells for Improved Device Performance and Reduced Hysteresis}, series = {ACS applied materials \& interfaces}, volume = {9}, journal = {ACS applied materials \& interfaces}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1944-8244}, doi = {10.1021/acsami.7b00900}, pages = {17246 -- 17256}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Solar cells made from inorganic organic perovskites have gradually approached market requirements as their efficiency and stability have improved tremendously in recent years. Planar low-temperature processed perovskite solar cells are advantageous for possible large-scale production but are more prone to exhibiting photocurrent hysteresis, especially in the regular n-i-p structure. Here, a systematic characterization of different electron selective contacts with a variety of chemical and electrical properties in planar n-i-p devices processed below 180 degrees C is presented. The inorganic metal oxides TiO2 and SnO2, the organic fullerene derivatives C-60, PCBM, and ICMA, as well as double-layers with a metal oxide/PCBM structure are used as electron transport materials (ETMs). Perovskite layers deposited atop, the different ETMs with the herein applied fabrication method show a similar morphology according to scanning electron microscopy. Further, surface photovoltage spectroscopy measurements indicate comparable perovskite absorber qualities on all ETMs, except TiO2, which shows a more prominent influence of defect states. Transient photoluminescence studies together with current voltage scans over a broad range of scan speeds reveal faster charge extraction, less pronounced hysteresis effects, and higher efficiencies for devices with fullerene compared to those with metal oxide ETMs. Beyond this, only double-layer ETM structures substantially diminish hysteresis effects for all performed scan speeds and strongly enhance the power conversion efficiency up to a champion stabilized value of 18.0\%. The results indicate reduced recombination losses for a double-layer TiO2/PCBM contact design: First, a reduction of shunt paths through the fullerene to the ITO layer. Second, an improved hole blocking by the wide band gap metal oxide. Third, decreased transport losses due to an energetically more favorable contact, as implied by photoelectron spectroscopy measurements. The herein demonstrated improvements of multilayer selective contacts may serve as a general design guideline for perovskite solar cells.}, language = {en} } @article{BenduhnTvingstedtPiersimonietal.2017, author = {Benduhn, Johannes and Tvingstedt, Kristofer and Piersimoni, Fortunato and Ullbrich, Sascha and Fan, Yeli and Tropiano, Manuel and McGarry, Kathryn A. and Zeika, Olaf and Riede, Moritz K. and Douglas, Christopher J. and Barlow, Stephen and Marder, Seth R. and Neher, Dieter and Spoltore, Donato and Vandewal, Koen}, title = {Intrinsic non-radiative voltage losses in fullerene-based organic solar cells}, series = {Nature Energy}, volume = {2}, journal = {Nature Energy}, publisher = {Nature Publ. Group}, address = {London}, issn = {2058-7546}, doi = {10.1038/nenergy.2017.53}, pages = {6}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Organic solar cells demonstrate external quantum efficiencies and fill factors approaching those of conventional photovoltaic technologies. However, as compared with the optical gap of the absorber materials, their open-circuit voltage is much lower, largely due to the presence of significant non-radiative recombination. Here, we study a large data set of published and new material combinations and find that non-radiative voltage losses decrease with increasing charge-transfer-state energies. This observation is explained by considering non-radiative charge-transfer-state decay as electron transfer in the Marcus inverted regime, being facilitated by a common skeletal molecular vibrational mode. Our results suggest an intrinsic link between non-radiative voltage losses and electron-vibration coupling, indicating that these losses are unavoidable. Accordingly, the theoretical upper limit for the power conversion efficiency of single-junction organic solar cells would be reduced to about 25.5\% and the optimal optical gap increases to (1.45-1.65) eV, that is, (0.2-0.3) eV higher than for technologies with minimized non-radiative voltage losses.}, language = {en} } @article{StolterfohtWolffAmiretal.2017, author = {Stolterfoht, Martin and Wolff, Christian Michael and Amir, Yohai and Paulke, Andreas and Perdigon-Toro, Lorena and Caprioglio, Pietro and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Approaching the fill factor Shockley-Queisser limit in stable, dopant-free triple cation perovskite solar cells}, series = {Energy \& Environmental Science}, volume = {10}, journal = {Energy \& Environmental Science}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, address = {Cambridge}, issn = {1754-5692}, doi = {10.1039/c7ee00899f}, pages = {1530 -- 1539}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Perovskite solar cells now compete with their inorganic counterparts in terms of power conversion efficiency, not least because of their small open-circuit voltage (V-OC) losses. A key to surpass traditional thin-film solar cells is the fill factor (FF). Therefore, more insights into the physical mechanisms that define the bias dependence of the photocurrent are urgently required. In this work, we studied charge extraction and recombination in efficient triple cation perovskite solar cells with undoped organic electron/hole transport layers (ETL/HTL). Using integral time of flight we identify the transit time through the HTL as the key figure of merit for maximizing the fill factor (FF) and efficiency. Complementarily, intensity dependent photocurrent and V-OC measurements elucidate the role of the HTL on the bias dependence of non-radiative and transport-related loss channels. We show that charge transport losses can be completely avoided under certain conditions, yielding devices with FFs of up to 84\%. Optimized cells exhibit power conversion efficiencies of above 20\% for 6 mm(2) sized pixels and 18.9\% for a device area of 1 cm(2). These are record efficiencies for hybrid perovskite devices with dopant-free transport layers, highlighting the potential of this device technology to avoid charge-transport limitations and to approach the Shockley-Queisser limit.}, language = {en} } @article{VandewalBenduhnSchellhammeretal.2017, author = {Vandewal, Koen and Benduhn, Johannes and Schellhammer, Karl Sebastian and Vangerven, Tim and R{\"u}ckert, Janna E. and Piersimoni, Fortunato and Scholz, Reinhard and Zeika, Olaf and Fan, Yeli and Barlow, Stephen and Neher, Dieter and Marder, Seth R. and Manca, Jean and Spoltore, Donato and Cuniberti, Gianaurelio and Ortmann, Frank}, title = {Absorption Tails of Donor}, series = {Journal of the American Chemical Society}, volume = {139}, journal = {Journal of the American Chemical Society}, number = {4}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {0002-7863}, doi = {10.1021/jacs.6b12857}, pages = {1699 -- 1704}, year = {2017}, abstract = {In disordered organic semiconductors, the transfer of a rather localized charge carrier from one site to another triggers a deformation of the molecular structure quantified by the intramolecular relaxation energy. A similar structural relaxation occurs upon population of intermolecular charge-transfer (CT) states formed at organic electron donor (D)-acceptor (A) interfaces. Weak CT absorption bands for D A complexes occur at photon energies below the optical gaps of both the donors and the C-60 acceptor as a result of optical transitions from the neutral ground state to the ionic CT state. In this work, we show that temperature-activated intramolecular vibrations of the ground state play a major role in determining the line shape of such CT absorption bands. This allows us to extract values for the relaxation energy related to the geometry change from neutral to ionic CT complexes. Experimental values for the relaxation energies of 20 D:C-60 CT complexes correlate with values calculated within density functional theory. These results provide an experimental method for determining the polaron relaxation energy in solid-state organic D-A blends and show the importance of a reduced relaxation energy, which we introduce to characterize thermally activated CT processes.}, language = {en} } @article{KellyRolandZhangetal.2017, author = {Kelly, Mary Allison and Roland, Steffen and Zhang, Qianqian and Lee, Youngmin and Kabius, Bernd and Wang, Qing and Gomez, Enrique D. and Neher, Dieter and You, Wei}, title = {Incorporating Fluorine Substitution into Conjugated Polymers for Solar Cells}, series = {The journal of physical chemistry : C, Nanomaterials and interfaces}, volume = {121}, journal = {The journal of physical chemistry : C, Nanomaterials and interfaces}, number = {4}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1932-7447}, doi = {10.1021/acs.jpcc.6b10993}, pages = {2059 -- 2068}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Fluorinating conjugated polymers is a proven strategy for creating high performance materials in polymer solar cells, yet few studies have investigated the importance of the fluorination method. We compare the performance of three fluorinated systems: a poly(benzodithieno-dithienyltriazole) (PBnDT-XTAZ) random copolymer where 50\% of the acceptor units are difluorinated, PBnDT-mFTAZ where every acceptor unit is monofluorinated, and a 1:1 physical blend of the difluorinated and nonfluorinated polymer. All systems have the same degree of fluorination (50\%) yet via different methods (chemically vs physically, random vs regular). We show that these three systems have equivalent photovoltaic behavior:,similar to 5.2\% efficiency with a short-circuit current (J(sc)) at,similar to 11 mA cm(-2), an open-circuit voltage (v(oc)) at 0.77 V, and a fill factor (FF) of similar to 60\%. Further investigation of these three systems demonstrates that the charge generation, charge extraction, and charge transfer state are essentially identical for the three studied systems. Transmission electron microscopy shows no significant differences in the morphologies. All these data illustrate that it is possible to improve performance not only via regular or random fluorination but also by physical addition via a ternary blend. Thus, our results demonstrate the versatility of incorporating fluorine in the active layer of polymer solar cells to enhance device performance.}, language = {en} } @article{FangHolzmuellerMatulaitisetal.2016, author = {Fang, Lijia and Holzmueller, Felix and Matulaitis, Tomas and Baasner, Anne and Hauenstein, Christoph and Benduhn, Johannes and Schwarze, Martin and Petrich, Annett and Piersimoni, Fortunato and Scholz, Reinhard and Zeika, Olaf and Koerner, Christian and Neher, Dieter and Vandewal, Koen and Leo, Karl}, title = {Fluorine-containing low-energy-gap organic dyes with low voltage losses for organic solar cells}, series = {Synthetic metals : the journal of electronic polymers and electronic molecular materials}, volume = {222}, journal = {Synthetic metals : the journal of electronic polymers and electronic molecular materials}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Lausanne}, issn = {0379-6779}, doi = {10.1016/j.synthmet.2016.10.025}, pages = {232 -- 239}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Fluorine-containing donor molecules TFTF, CNTF and PRTF are designed and isomer selectively synthesized for application in vacuum-deposited organic solar cells. These molecules comprise a donor acceptor molecular architecture incorporating thiophene and benzothiadiazole derivatives as the electron-donating and electron-withdrawing moieties, respectively. As opposed to previously reported materials from this class, PRTF can be purified by vacuum sublimation at moderate to high yields because of its higher volatility and better stabilization due to a stronger intramolecular hydrogen bond, as compared to TFTF and CNTF. The UV-vis absorption spectra of the three donors show an intense broadband absorption between 500 nm and 800 nm with, similar positions of their frontier energy levels. The photophysical properties of the three donor molecules are thoroughly tested and optimized in bulk heterojunction solar cells with C-60 as acceptor. PRTF shows the best performance, yielding power conversion efficiencies of up to 3.8\%. Moreover, the voltage loss for the PRTF device due to the non radiative recombination of free charge carriers is exceptionally low (0.26 V) as compared to typical values for organic solar cells (>0.34V). (C) 2016 Published by Elsevier B.V.}, language = {en} }