Abstract
The morphology of bulk heterojunction organic photovoltaic cells controls many of the performance characteristics of devices. However, measuring this morphology is challenging because of the small length-scales and low contrast between organic materials. Here we use nanoscale photocurrent mapping, ultrafast fluorescence and exciton diffusion to observe the detailed morphology of a high-performance blend of PTB7:PC 71 BM. We show that optimized blends consist of elongated fullerene-rich and polymer-rich fibre-like domains, which are 10-50 nm wide and 200-400 nm long. These elongated domains provide a concentration gradient for directional charge diffusion that helps in the extraction of charge pairs with 80% efficiency. In contrast, blends with agglomerated fullerene domains show a much lower efficiency of charge extraction of ∼45%, which is attributed to poor electron and hole transport. Our results show that the formation of narrow and elongated domains is desirable for efficient bulk heterojunction solar cells. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited.
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CITATION STYLE
Hedley, G. J., Ward, A. J., Alekseev, A., Howells, C. T., Martins, E. R., Serrano, L. A., … Samuel, I. D. W. (2013). Determining the optimum morphology in high-performance polymer-fullerene organic photovoltaic cells. Nature Communications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms3867
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