Issue 4, 2016

An electrode design rule for high performance top-illuminated organic photovoltaics

Abstract

An electrode design rule for high performance top-illuminated bulk-heterojunction organic photovoltaics is proposed, that enables the device architecture to be simplified by removing the need for the electron selective layer at the interface with the low work function reflective electrode. This new guideline for electrode design is underpinned by device studies in conjunction with a study of the energetics at the interface between five widely used solution processed organic semiconductors of both electron donor and acceptor type, and a stable low work function reflective substrate electrode. The magnitude and distribution of space charge resulting from ground-state electron transfer from the electrode into each organic semiconductor upon contact formation is derived from direct measurements of the interfacial energetics using the Kelvin probe technique, which enables the variation in potential across the entire film thickness used in the devices to be probed.

Graphical abstract: An electrode design rule for high performance top-illuminated organic photovoltaics

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
21 Apr 2016
Accepted
09 May 2016
First published
09 May 2016
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Mater. Horiz., 2016,3, 348-354

An electrode design rule for high performance top-illuminated organic photovoltaics

M. S. Tyler, I. M. Nadeem and R. A. Hatton, Mater. Horiz., 2016, 3, 348 DOI: 10.1039/C6MH00124F

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