Science and Technology of Advanced Materials (Dec 2018)

Photo-stability study of a solution-processed small molecule solar cell system: correlation between molecular conformation and degradation

  • Michael J. Newman,
  • Emily M. Speller,
  • Jérémy Barbé,
  • Joel Luke,
  • Meng Li,
  • Zhe Li,
  • Zhao-Kui Wang,
  • Sagar M. Jain,
  • Ji-Seon Kim,
  • Harrison Ka Hin Lee,
  • Wing Chung Tsoi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/14686996.2018.1433948
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 194 – 202

Abstract

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Solution-processed organic small molecule solar cells (SMSCs) have achieved efficiency over 11%. However, very few studies have focused on their stability under illumination and the origin of the degradation during the so-called burn-in period. Here, we studied the burn-in period of a solution-processed SMSC using benzodithiophene terthiophene rhodamine:[6,6]-phenyl C71 butyric acid methyl ester (BTR:PC71BM) with increasing solvent vapour annealing time applied to the active layer, controlling the crystallisation of the BTR phase. We find that the burn-in behaviour is strongly correlated to the crystallinity of BTR. To look at the possible degradation mechanisms, we studied the fresh and photo-aged blend films with grazing incidence X-ray diffraction, UV–vis absorbance, Raman spectroscopy and photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy. Although the crystallinity of BTR affects the performance drop during the burn-in period, the degradation is found not to originate from the crystallinity changes of the BTR phase, but correlates with changes in molecular conformation – rotation of the thiophene side chains, as resolved by Raman spectroscopy which could be correlated to slight photobleaching and changes in PL spectra.

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