Small-molecular iridium complex based organic solar cells with improved photovoltaic performance through device optimization†
Abstract
Small-molecular iridium complex based organic solar cells (OSCs) show inferior power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) to those of pure organic/polymer analogues. To further improve the performance of such OSCs, we reported a bilayer device structure, which was fabricated by sequentially spin-coating a p-type polymer semiconductor (poly[4,4′-bis(2-butyloctoxycarbonyl-[2,2′-bithiophene]-5,5-diyl)-alt-(2,2′bithiophene-5,5′diyl)]) (PDCBT) layer and a bulk-heterojunction (BHJ) layer with the cyclometalated Ir complex (TBzIr) as the donor and PC71BM as the acceptor. Compared to the original TBzIr:PC71BM BHJ device, the bilayer PDCBT/TBzIr:PC71BM structure exhibited an identical high open circuit voltage of 0.92 V, and increased both short circuit current from 9.25 to 11.14 mA cm−2 and fill factor from 0.46 to 0.61. The p-type PDCBT layer was inserted to afford increased light absorption, assist the upper BHJ blends to form optimized morphologies, and provide supplementary donor–acceptor interfaces to facilitate exciton dissociation. Therefore, the PCE could be significantly improved from 3.91% for TBzIr:PC71BM to 6.17% for PDCBT/TBzIr:PC71BM. To the best of our knowledge, this is the highest efficiency ever reported for small-molecular Ir complex based organic solar cells.