Degradation pathways in standard and inverted DBP-C 70 based organic solar cells

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Abstract

Achieving long-term stability in organic solar cells is a remaining bottleneck for the commercialization of this otherwise highly appealing technology. In this work, we study the performance and stability differences in standard and inverted DBP/C 70 based organic solar cells. Differences in the charge-transfer state properties of inverted and standard configuration DBP/C 70 solar cells are revealed by sensitive external quantum efficiency measurements, leading to differences in the open-circuit voltages of the devices. The degradation of standard and inverted solar cell configurations at ISOS aging test conditions (ISOS-D-3 and ISOS-T-3) was investigated and compared. The results indicate that the performance drop in the small molecule bilayer solar cells is less related to changes at the D-A interface, suggesting also a pronounced morphological stability, and instead, in the case of inverted cells, dominated by degradation at the electron transport layer (ETL) bathocuproine (BCP). Photoluminescence measurements, electron-only-device characteristics, and stability measurements show improved exciton blocking, electron transport properties and a higher stability for BCP/Ag ETL stacks, giving rise to inverted devices with enhanced performance and device stability.

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Sherafatipour, G., Benduhn, J., Patil, B. R., Ahmadpour, M., Spoltore, D., Rubahn, H. G., … Madsen, M. (2019). Degradation pathways in standard and inverted DBP-C 70 based organic solar cells. Scientific Reports, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-40541-6

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