Magaly
Ramírez-Como
a,
Enas
Moustafa
a,
Mohamed
Samir
a,
Alfonsina Abat Amelenan
Torimtubun
a,
José G.
Sánchez
b,
Josep
Pallarès
*a and
Lluis F.
Marsal
*a
aDepartment of Electric, Electronic and Automatic Engineering, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, 43007 Tarragona, Spain. E-mail: josep.pallares@urv.cat; lluis.marsal@urv.cat
bInstitute of Chemical Research of Catalonia, The Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology (ICIQ-BIST), 43007 Tarragona, Spain
First published on 28th June 2023
Organic solar cells (OSCs) have reached an efficiency near 20%; however, their low long-term stability is the main limitation to their industrialization. In this work, we investigated the degradation of bulk heterojunction non-fullerene solar cells (NFA-OSCs) based on PM6:Y7 with an efficiency of 17.5%. The degradation analysis was carried out following the established ISOS-D-1 protocol under different degradation conditions: N2 atmosphere (H2O < 0.1 ppm and O2 < 0.1 ppm) and encapsulated devices and non-encapsulated devices exposed to ambient conditions (60 ± 5% relative humidity). The evolution of the current density–voltage (J–V) and impedance spectroscopy (IS) measurements were used to analyse the degradation process during 1000 h and its relationship with physical mechanisms. The degradation of encapsulated and non-encapsulated devices is mainly caused by the drop in the open circuit voltage (VOC). For devices exposed to the N2 atmosphere, the fill factor (FF) was the most affected parameter. The dependence of short circuit current density (JSC) versus light intensity study reveals that the efficiency of non-encapsulated devices decreases faster due to a higher bimolecular recombination degree. The devices under a N2 atmosphere and those encapsulated showed T80 lifetimes of 1000 h and 336 h, respectively, whereas the non-encapsulated devices have a short T80 lifetime of less than 24 h. The analysis of the efficiency decay was used to identify the different degradation mechanisms (by diffused environmental water or oxygen or by intrinsic polymer chemical reactions) under different conditions. The degradation origin of the active layer and interlayers was investigated through impedance spectroscopy measurements.
However, high efficiency is not the only requirement to scale up OSCs in the market. The stability of cells is still a factor that limits their operating lifetime and the key criterion to make the large-scale fabrication of OSCs commercially more feasible. For this reason, an important aim to be accomplished is looking for selective materials and developing good engineering strategies that improve the stability of the devices for a long time. Different strategies have been used to improve the OSC stability and to minimize intrinsic degradation. For instance, developing new buffer layer materials that are more stable, alternating device structures, modifying the chemical structure of active layer materials, eliminating the photo-dimerization of fullerenes, increasing the material crystallinity of nonfullerene materials, and varying contact electrodes.14–16 Additionally, to reduce extrinsic degradation, an appropriate encapsulation layer has been widely used to prevent the interaction of moisture and oxygen from the atmosphere and minimize the degradation of materials inside OSCs.
In this context, several characterization techniques can be used to analyse the stability of the devices, e.g. the current density–voltage (J–V) characteristic curve to analyse the evolution of photovoltaic parameters;17,18 external quantum efficiency (EQE) to identify the species involved in degradation by processes such as chromophore bleaching; light intensity dependent short circuit current density (JSC)/open circuit voltage (VOC) to study the recombination and trapping upon aging; absorption UV-Vis spectroscopy to reveal chromophore bleaching or changes in morphology such as directional rearrangement; space charge limited current (SCLC) to observe the evolution of carrier mobility; impedance spectroscopy (IS) to observe the evolution upon aging of resistive and capacitive behaviour that reveals the change in transport and recombination regimes.19–24
In this research study, we investigate the degradation of the conventional OSCs that were optimized in our previous work using PM6:Y7.6 We analysed the changes in the J–V characteristic curve and performed IS measurements to understand the behaviour of their performance over time. The standard procedure of the ISOS D-1 protocol was used for an accurate lifetime determination. The degradation study was made in the dark for up to 1000 h. Three conditions were analysed: devices under an inert N2 atmosphere and encapsulated and non-encapsulated devices under ambient conditions. The fabricated non-fullerene acceptor OSCs (NFA-OSCs) have the structure of ITO/PEDOT:PSS/PM6:Y7/PDINO/Ag. The study is performed by fitting the evolution of the power conversion efficiency parameter by the decaying of two exponentials with characteristic decay times, which are associated with the possible predominant degradation mechanisms. Impedance spectroscopy characterization was performed under AM 1.5G light conditions, at open circuit voltage, to study the transport processes taking place in the device. An equivalent circuit, consisting of three RC elements in series, was associated with each layer (ETL, active layer, and HTL) of the NFA-OSCs.
To obtain more information about the degradation trend behaviour of NFA-OSCs exposed to three different conditions, Fig. 2(a)–(d) show the normalized device performance parameters (PCE, VOC, JSC, and fill factor (FF)) as a function of the exposure time. Corresponding to the ISOS-D-1 protocol, the operating shelf lifetime of each studied NFA-OSCs is displayed in Fig. 1(b)–(d) and shown in Table S1.† The maximum initial PCE measurement (E0) for each device was 17.53%, 16.97%, and 16.46% for devices in a N2 atmosphere and encapsulated and non-encapsulated devices, respectively. The T80 is the time at which the PCE decays 20% with respect to E0. Fig. 2(a) shows the PCE decay behaviour of all cells. It should be noted that for non-encapsulated devices a rapid decay of PCE is observed in the first 48 h. Meanwhile, a slower PCE decay is observed in encapsulated devices. This behaviour is a degradation loss mechanism known as “burn-in loss” due to the photochemical reactions within the active layer affecting charge transport properties.28,29 The non-encapsulated devices lose 20% of their initial PCE before 24 h (T80), faster than encapsulated devices which took 336 h. The poor stability of non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs is related to water and oxygen under ambient conditions degrading the electrode interfaces and reducing the electrical properties of the active layer of OSCs.30,31 After 1000 h, the PCE of devices under a N2 atmosphere remained at 88% of its initial value.
Fig. 2 Normalized performance parameters (a) PCE, (b) VOC, (c) JSC, and (d) FF of the NFA-OSCs under three different conditions: N2 atmosphere and encapsulated and non-encapsulated devices. In addition, (a) shows the fitting of the normalized PCE over the storage time using eqn (1) and the solid lines show the fitting curve. (e) Shunt and (f) series resistances of the NFA-OSCs under the aforementioned conditions. |
As shown in Fig. 2(a), the degradation of all the devices follows an exponential law decay. The fast initial decay followed by a slow decay is modeled by the superposition of two exponential functions with different time constants, as reported previously in the literature.24,32,33 In Fig. 2(a), the lines show the fitted degradation behaviour over time using eqn (1).
(1) |
Conditions | A 1 | T 1 [h] | A 2 | T 2 [h] |
---|---|---|---|---|
N2 atmosphere | 0.20 | 7000 | 0.80 | 7000 |
Encapsulated | 0.50 | 728 | 0.50 | 1400 |
Non-encapsulated | 0.50 | 17 | 0.53 | 1372 |
The time constant T1 for non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs (17 h) shows the lowest value of the three conditions of degradation, suggesting that these cells suffer more from the presence of water. It is well known that PEDOT:PSS can accelerate the oxidation process due to its hygroscopic nature.30 In the same way, for encapsulated NFA-OSCs, we can suggest that the degradation mechanism is mainly due to the increased chemical reaction of the materials with water than with oxygen due to T1 (728 h) being lower than T2 (1400 h). Some authors have reported that encapsulation by using barrier materials with a water vapour transmission ratio (WVTR) of 10−3 g m−2 day−1 is sufficient to achieve lifetimes of several thousand hours in operation.17,39 We encapsulated our cells using an NOA adhesive inside the glass–glass structure. The WVTR, reported by the manufacturer of the NOA adhesive is 22.94 g m−2 day−1. Kovrov et al.40 reported a WVTR of glass–glass structures using epoxy glues and commercial acrylic with values between 0.2 and 1.5 g m−2 day−1. Therefore, it seems that after enough time (336 h) in encapsulated NFA-OSCs, the WVTR of the adhesive is not enough to avoid the cell degradation.
The behaviour of shunt (RSh) and series (RS) resistances over time was also analysed (Fig. 2(e) and (f)). The RSh of non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs degraded rapidly from the beginning. However, in encapsulated NFA-OSCs, RSh was stable for the first 168 h, after which it decreased rapidly. As shown in Fig. 2(b), the VOC for encapsulated and non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs was the parameter that shows a similar trend to the PCE decay (Fig. 2(a)). Therefore, the variation of PCE with time for both degradation conditions was mainly due to the variation of VOC. Additionally, both VOC and RSh of encapsulated devices decreased after 168 h, while for non-encapsulated devices these decreased after 24 h (see Fig. 2(b) and (e)). It has been previously reported that the VOC can be reduced if RSh reduces.41,42 The reduction of RSh can be associated with the recombination of charge carriers near the donor/acceptor interface of the active layer.43 Furthermore, the VOC can also decrease due to charge recombination at the HTL/donor interface if bulk heterojunctions present barriers at this interface.44 On the other hand, for NFA-OSCs stored under a N2 atmosphere, RSh and VOC showed a minimal variation in the initial value at the end of the analysis time.
Fig. S2(a)–(c)† show the J–V characteristic in the dark through the all-time analysis. In Fig. S2† it can be observed how the current density between 0.9 and 1 V decreases with time, which reveals the increment of the RS. This is confirmed from the plot of RSvs. time, in Fig. 2(f). The RS of non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs increased from the beginning, and after 336 h RS values increased abruptly. On the other hand, for encapsulated NFA-OSCs the RS remained with slight variation and after 336 h, increased gradually. For NFA-OSCs exposed to an N2 atmosphere, the RS remained at around 2 Ω cm2 throughout the analysis. The decrease in the JSC, observed in Fig. 2(c), for encapsulated and non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs can be attributed to an increment in the RS. Generally, the increase in RS can be related to different factors such as (i) the formation of an isolation layer between the metallic contact and the active layer, which reduces the collection of charge carriers;45,46 (ii) the reduction of the density of charge carriers and the mobility, related to traps present in the active layer, produced by the interaction of O2 and H2O.30,32 On the other hand, the JSC stability decay behaviour of OSCs can also be attributed to phase separation of the acceptor and donor domains, which diminishes the probability that charge carriers are collected in the electrodes and, as a result, a reduction of JSC occurs.47,48 This last one can be an explanation for the decay of JSC in devices exposed to a N2 atmosphere.
The FF of the NFA-OSCs for the three degradation conditions is shown in Fig. 2(d). For NFA-OSCs exposed to a N2 atmosphere, the FF shows a similar trend to the PCE decay (see Fig. 2(a)). Therefore, we suggest that FF decay mainly dominates the degradation process in NFA-OSCs under a N2 atmosphere. It is well known that lower mobility of the charge carriers leads to a longer carrier extraction time and, therefore, increases the probability of bimolecular recombination, which results in a reduced FF.17,46 We observed that for non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs the FF reduces as the RSh decreases (Fig. 2(d) and (e)) for the entire analysis time, suggesting that this reduction of RSh is the main cause of the FF reduction due to a greater charge loss by recombination. After 336 h, similar behaviour is observed for encapsulated NFA-OSCs.
To obtain further analysis of the recombination within the devices, we carried out the fitting of the J–V characteristic under light using an equivalent circuit model consisting of three diodes (see Fig. S3†). The detailed fitting calculation can be found elsewhere.17,49 Table S2† summarizes the parameters extracted from the modelled J–V characteristic curves for fresh and degraded NFA-OSCs after 1000 h. All fresh NFA-OSCs show an ideal exponential region with an ideality factor n1 in the range of 1.0 to 1.11. The ideality factor n1 indicates the dominant transport mechanism in the active layer of the device. It is well known that if the predominant transport mechanism is diffusion then n = 1, and if the dominant transport mechanism is recombination, n = 2.50 The values obtained for fresh NFA—OSCs indicate that the transport mechanism is mainly diffusion. Table S2† shows that the extracted ideality factors tend to increase over time as the devices degrade. It was observed that for NFA-OSCs under a N2 atmosphere n1 increased slightly, which suggests that the active layer was degrading slightly. For encapsulated and non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs, n1 varies significantly from 1.11 to 1.40 and 1.50, respectively. These values after 1000 h can indicate a combination of monomolecular and bimolecular recombination processes.51 In both devices, n2 and n3 become greater than 1, whereby the recombination mechanism seems to have some importance in the ETL/active layer/HTL interfaces of encapsulated and non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs. Table S2† further shows that the values of J01 increased over time for all the NFA-OSCs. In OSCs, J01 represents the minority charge density in the vicinity of the barrier present at the donor/acceptor interface in BHJ solar cells.52 The greater the recombination in the active layer the greater the leakage current (J01).53 At the end of analysis time, if J01 has a higher value for non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs than for encapsulated NFA-OSCs, it can be implied that there is less recombination in encapsulated devices. The increase in J01 can be related to the presence of an additional source of minority charges near the heterojunction of the active layer.54 Table S2† shows a larger reduction in the photogenerated current density (JL) over time in encapsulated and non-encapsulated devices. For non-encapsulated devices, the photocurrent decreases by one magnitude order more than for encapsulated devices at the end of the analysis time. It is well known that the photocurrent represents the number of photogenerated charge carriers that become collected at the electrodes. The photocurrent is directly related to the EQE, which depends on the efficiencies of absorption, exciton dissociation, charge separation, and charge extraction.55 In addition, when there is a low charge extraction rate it leads to space charge accumulation, and as a result, there is a major effect of recombination.56 This behaviour is associated with s-shaped J–V characteristics.26,57 Due to the aforementioned reasons, we can suggest that the charge extraction efficiency reduces more in non-encapsulated devices than in encapsulated devices. The J–V characteristics for non-encapsulated devices show an s-shape and as will be seen later these devices present major biomolecular recombination.
The external quantum efficiency (EQE) response over time was measured for encapsulated NFA-OSCs (see Fig. 3(a)), devices under a N2 atmosphere (Fig. S4(a)†), and non-encapsulated devices (Fig. S4(b)†). All devices show a similar photoresponse for fresh cells from 300 nm to 1000 nm. The EQE response intensity in a short wavelength range of 300 nm to 400 nm is slightly low compared to the intensity at longer wavelengths, due to the limited absorption of the polymer donor (PM6) in this region.3,58 It can be noticed in Fig. 3(a) and S4(b)† that the intensity of the spectrum decreased over time. This may indicate that the absorption efficiency and the separation, transport, and charge extraction in the encapsulated NFA-OSCs have degraded, which matches the decrease in JSC observed in Fig. 2(c). As observed in detail in Fig. 3(a), it can be pointed out that the peak position at 820 nm decreased its intensity as compared to that of fresh devices for encapsulated NFA-OSCs. The peak locations in these range wavelengths (800–850 nm) are related to the absorption peaks of Y7, which are attributed to π–π staking, which provides more absorption from the Y7 acceptor that is efficiently converted into photocurrent.59,60 Therefore, if in this wavelength region, the intensity of the EQE response is reduced, we can infer that the part of the photocurrent decreased due to the reductions of the π–π interactions. As a consequence, the JSC is reduced over time. On the other hand, for devices exposed to a N2 atmosphere, there was an inconsiderable diminution of the EQE response, indicating the most stable behaviour over time as compared to the fresh ones (Fig. S4†). This observed behaviour is coherent with the stabilized JSC values obtained over time by the J–V characteristics in Fig. 2(c).
Fig. 3 (a) EQE spectra of the encapsulated NFA-OSCs; (b) JSC as a function of light intensity of the NFA-OSCs under three conditions: N2 atmosphere and encapsulated and non-encapsulated devices. Symbols show the experimental data and the solid and dotted lines show the fitted data using eqn (2). |
Additionally, in order to complement the information about the recombination mechanisms within the active layer of cells, we measured the dependence of JSC on the incident light intensity (LI). The J–V characteristics of the NFA-OSCs were obtained at different LIs in the AM 1.5G spectrum. Fig. 3(b) shows the dependence of JSCvs. LI on a log–log scale. A power-law dependence of JSC under LI is generally observed in OSCs and can be expressed as:
JSC ∝ (LI)b | (2) |
To perform a deep study of the degraded NFA-OSCs, an equivalent electrical model is used to fit the experimental Cole–Cole plot4,63,65,66 (see Fig. 4(f)). Every RC circuit is related to the capacitance and resistance of each layer. In our case, we related capacitance C1 to PEDOT:PSS, C2 to PM6:Y7, and C3 to PDINO. The three associated resistances (R1, R2, and R3) to each capacitance were related to each layer, respectively. The series resistance (RS) is needed to represent the ohmic contact resistance and wire effects, which are mostly related to substrate resistance. We found that the RS value is low, from 3 Ω to 4 Ω, in all cells. Fig. 4(d) shows the capacitance values extracted from the equivalent electrical model. The geometric capacitance of each layer can be theoretically calculated as Cg = εε0A/d, where ε is the relative dielectric permittivity for the layer, ε0 is the vacuum dielectric permittivity, A is the device area and d is the layer thickness. Table 2 shows the calculated capacitance values for each layer in the structure. These values were used to begin the fitting of IS measurements over time. From Fig. 4(d), we noticed three regions for capacitance values over time. The first region is above 26 nF, corresponding to PDINO. This capacitance shows the highest increase over time for non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs. The second region is between 5 nF and 10 nF corresponding to PEDOT:PSS. These values show slight and similar increases for both devices, encapsulated and non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs. The third region, around 3 nF, is related to the PM6:Y7 layer; for all degradation conditions these values have a minimum variation over time. This might indicate that at VOC, the IS response was controlled by the geometrical capacitances of the active layer provided by the metal insulator-metal model indicating the presence of fully depleted layers.67
Layers | ε layer | d layer [nm] | Capacitance [nF] |
---|---|---|---|
PEDOT:PSS | 2.2 | 35 | 5 |
PM6:Y7 | 3.565 | 100 | 2.79 |
PDINO | 58 | 15 | 26.5 |
The normalized resistances (R) values as a function of the storage time are shown in Fig. 4(e). Table S3† shows the resistance values without normalization. The results show that the resistance for all layers in NFA-OSCs stored in a N2 atmosphere varies slightly with degradation time. This is the reason why we can observe that PCE remained around 88% at the end of the analysis time. The layer that suffered from the least degradation was PM6:Y7 because it presented the least variation in R values. Concerning the encapsulated NFA-OSCs, the PDINO layer shows the least variation for R values. Notice that the R values for the active layer and PEDOT:PSS have the highest variation over time, whereby these layers govern the degradation behaviour of encapsulated NFA-OSCs. If these layers govern the performance over time, we can point out that the VOC behaviour over time in encapsulated NFA-OSCs decreases due to charge recombination at the HTL/donor interface.44 On the other hand, for non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs, the most important increase in the R values was observed for the PEDOT:PSS layer. Thus, the decrease in the performance of NFA-OSCs is mainly due to the degradation of the PEDOT:PSS. The PEDOT:PSS film exhibits poor stability when exposed to ambient conditions (oxygen and water). This confirms the “burn-in loss” effect observed in the performance parameters for the non-encapsulated NFA-OSCs, especially the VOC and FF, which leads to their rapid degradation behaviour. In addition, compared with the encapsulated cells, the encapsulated stack provides enough protection to slightly reduce the degradation of the active layer and PEDOT:PSS. Therefore, to achieve long-term stable-OSCs it is necessary either to prepare a more stable PM6:Y7 blend via additive mediated aggregation control or/and to look for materials for replacing PEDOT:PSS. Zhang et al. showed that PCE for encapsulated inverted NFA-OSCs based on PM6:Y7 remained over 20% after 800 h.68 On the other hand, Ahmad et al. showed that PCE for inverted NFA-OSCs based on PM6:Y7 stored in a N2 atmosphere remained over 86% after 600 h.69 Therefore, the selection of an adequate hole transport layer and blend engineering provides a promising strategy in NFA-OSCs since a longer lifetime can be obtained with a higher initial PCE value. Another promising strategy is the fabrication of layer-by-layer OSCs, which also exhibit better stability in comparison with bulk heterojunction OSCs.70,71 Furthermore, a more efficient encapsulation process must be applied to achieve long-term stability.
Based on the impedance spectroscopy results and the evolution of short circuit current density (JSC) versus light intensity, we can suggest that poor stability of non-encapsulated devices is strongly associated with the oxidation of PEDOT:PSS by moisture, and these devices suffer from a significant loss of performance due to bimolecular recombination in comparison with those under other studied conditions. Finally, these results demonstrate that to obtain high-efficiency NFA-OSCs based on PM6:Y7 with a longer lifetime, a more efficient encapsulation process must be applied. Moreover, an adequate hole transport layer should be considered.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3se00703k |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |