Illumination angle and layer thickness influence on the photo current generation in organic solar cells: A combined simulative and experimental study

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Abstract

In most future organic photovoltaic applications, such as fixed roof installations, facade or clothing integration, the solar cells will face the sun under varying angles. By a combined simulative and experimental study, we investigate the mutual interdependencies of the angle of light incidence, the absorber layer thickness and the photon harvesting efficiency within a typical organic photovoltaic device. For thin absorber layers, we find a steady decrease of the effective photocurrent towards increasing angles. For 90-140 nm thick absorber layers, however, we observe an effective photocurrent enhancement, exhibiting a maximum yield at angles of incidence of about 50°. Both effects mainly originate from the angle-dependent spatial broadening of the optical interference pattern inside the solar cell and a shift of the absorption maximum away from the metal electrode.

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Mescher, J., Mertens, A., Egel, A., Kettlitz, S. W., Lemmer, U., & Colsmann, A. (2015). Illumination angle and layer thickness influence on the photo current generation in organic solar cells: A combined simulative and experimental study. AIP Advances, 5(7). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4928074

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