Electric Field and Mobility Dependent First-Order Recombination Losses in Organic Solar Cells

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Abstract

The origin of photocurrent losses in the power-generating regime of organic solar cells (OSCs) remains a controversial topic, although recent literature suggests that the competition between bimolecular recombination and charge extraction determines the bias dependence of the photocurrent. Here the steady-state recombination dynamics is studied in bulk-heterojunction OSCs with different hole mobilities from short-circuit to maximum power point. It is shown that in this regime, in contrast to previous transient extracted charge and absorption spectroscopy studies, first-order recombination outweighs bimolecular recombination of photogenerated charge carriers. This study demonstrates that the first-order losses increase with decreasing slower carrier mobility, and attributes them to either mobilization of charges trapped at the donor:acceptor interface through the Poole–Frenkel effect, and/or recombination of photogenerated and injected charges. The dependence of both first-order and higher-order losses on the slower carrier mobility explains why the field dependence of OSC efficiencies has historically been attributed to charge-extraction losses.

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Stolterfoht, M., Shoaee, S., Armin, A., Jin, H., Kassal, I., Jiang, W., … Meredith, P. (2017). Electric Field and Mobility Dependent First-Order Recombination Losses in Organic Solar Cells. Advanced Energy Materials, 7(4). https://doi.org/10.1002/aenm.201601379

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