Traps and transport resistance are the next frontiers for stable non-fullerene acceptor solar cells

Christopher Wöpke, Clemens Göhler, Maria Saladina, Xiaoyan Du, Li Nian, Christopher Greve, Chenhui Zhu, Kaila M. Yallum, Yvonne J. Hofstetter, David Becker-Koch, Ning Li, Thomas Heumüller, Ilya Milekhin, Dietrich R.T. Zahn, Christoph J. Brabec, Natalie Banerji, Yana Vaynzof, Eva M. Herzig, Roderick C.I. MacKenzie, Carsten Deibel

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Stability is one of the most important challenges facing material research for organic solar cells (OSC) on their path to further commercialization. In the high-performance material system PM6:Y6 studied here, we investigate degradation mechanisms of inverted photovoltaic devices. We have identified two distinct degradation pathways: one requires the presence of both illumination and oxygen and features a short-circuit current reduction, the other one is induced thermally and marked by severe losses of open-circuit voltage and fill factor. We focus our investigation on the thermally accelerated degradation. Our findings show that bulk material properties and interfaces remain remarkably stable, however, aging-induced defect state formation in the active layer remains the primary cause of thermal degradation. The increased trap density leads to higher non-radiative recombination, which limits the open-circuit voltage and lowers the charge carrier mobility in the photoactive layer. Furthermore, we find the trap-induced transport resistance to be the major reason for the drop in fill factor. Our results suggest that device lifetimes could be significantly increased by marginally suppressing trap formation, leading to a bright future for OSC.
Original languageEnglish
Article number3786
JournalNature Communications
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2022
Externally publishedYes

OECD FOS+WOS

  • 1.03 PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND ASTRONOMY
  • 1.04 CHEMICAL SCIENCES
  • 1.06 BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES

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