TY - JOUR
T1 - Morphological stability and performance of polymer-fullerene solar cells under thermal stress
T2 - The impact of photoinduced PC60BM oligomerization
AU - Wong, Him Cheng
AU - Li, Zhe
AU - Tan, Ching Hong
AU - Zhong, Hongliang
AU - Huang, Zhenggang
AU - Bronstein, Hugo
AU - McCulloch, Iain
AU - Cabral, João T.
AU - Durrant, James R.
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2014 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2014/2/25
Y1 - 2014/2/25
N2 - We report a general light processing strategy for organic solar cells (OSC) that exploits the propensity of the fullerene derivative PC60BM to photo-oligomerize, which is capable of both stabilizing the polymer:PC 60BM active layer morphology and enhancing the device stability under thermal annealing. The observations hold for blends of PC60BM with an array of benchmark donor polymer systems, including P3HT, DPP-TT-T, PTB7, and PCDTBT. The morphology and kinetics of the thermally induced PC60BM crystallization within the blend films are investigated as a function of substrate and temperature. PC60BM nucleation rates on SiOx substrates exhibit a pronounced peak profile with temperature, whose maximum is polymer and blend-composition dependent. Modest illumination (<10 mW/cm2) significantly suppresses nucleation, which is quantified as function of dose, but does not affect crystalline shape or growth, in the micrometer range. On PEDOT:PSS substrates, thermally induced PC60BM aggregation is observed on smaller (≈100 nm) length scales, depending upon donor polymer, and also suppressed by light exposure. The concurrent thermal dissociation process of PC60BM oligomers in blend films is also investigated and the activation energy of the fullerene-fullerene bond is estimated to be 0.96 ± 0.04 eV. Following light processing, the thermal stability, and thus lifetime, of PCDTBT:PC60BM devices increases for annealing times up to 150 h. In contrast, PCDTBT:PC70BM OSCs are found to be largely light insensitive. The results are rationalized in terms of the suppression of PC60BM micro-and nanoscopic crystallization processes upon thermal annealing caused by photoinduced PC60BM oligomerization.
AB - We report a general light processing strategy for organic solar cells (OSC) that exploits the propensity of the fullerene derivative PC60BM to photo-oligomerize, which is capable of both stabilizing the polymer:PC 60BM active layer morphology and enhancing the device stability under thermal annealing. The observations hold for blends of PC60BM with an array of benchmark donor polymer systems, including P3HT, DPP-TT-T, PTB7, and PCDTBT. The morphology and kinetics of the thermally induced PC60BM crystallization within the blend films are investigated as a function of substrate and temperature. PC60BM nucleation rates on SiOx substrates exhibit a pronounced peak profile with temperature, whose maximum is polymer and blend-composition dependent. Modest illumination (<10 mW/cm2) significantly suppresses nucleation, which is quantified as function of dose, but does not affect crystalline shape or growth, in the micrometer range. On PEDOT:PSS substrates, thermally induced PC60BM aggregation is observed on smaller (≈100 nm) length scales, depending upon donor polymer, and also suppressed by light exposure. The concurrent thermal dissociation process of PC60BM oligomers in blend films is also investigated and the activation energy of the fullerene-fullerene bond is estimated to be 0.96 ± 0.04 eV. Following light processing, the thermal stability, and thus lifetime, of PCDTBT:PC60BM devices increases for annealing times up to 150 h. In contrast, PCDTBT:PC70BM OSCs are found to be largely light insensitive. The results are rationalized in terms of the suppression of PC60BM micro-and nanoscopic crystallization processes upon thermal annealing caused by photoinduced PC60BM oligomerization.
KW - PCBM crystallization
KW - PCBM photo-oligomerization
KW - organic solar cells
KW - solar cell thermal stability and lifetime
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84894613026&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/nn404687s
DO - 10.1021/nn404687s
M3 - Article
C2 - 24401106
AN - SCOPUS:84894613026
SN - 1936-0851
VL - 8
SP - 1297
EP - 1308
JO - ACS Nano
JF - ACS Nano
IS - 2
ER -