Giant (Dec 2024)
Systematic anode engineering enabling universal efficiency improvements in organic solar cells
Abstract
Anode modification and optimization is crucial towards improving performance of organic solar cells (OSCs). PEDOT:PSS is the most common choice as a hole transport layer (HTL) material, but suffers from issues including low conductivity. In this work, three alkyl amine derivatives - methylamine hydrochloride (MA), ethylamine hydrochloride (EA) and propylamine hydrochloride (PA) are doped into the commercially available Al 4083 PEDOT:PSS to form PEDOT:PSS-MA, PEDOT:PSS-EA and PEDOT:PSS-PA, as modified HTLs. All these modified HTLs exhibit improved chemical and electrical properties including work functions (WF), conductivities and charge carrier motilities. The alkyl amine doping shows compatibility in both Small Molecular Acceptors and All-Polymer OSCs. With PEDOT:PSS-MA demonstrates a highest PCE of 18.49 % compared to the 17.84 % of OSC devices prepared with pristine PEDOT:PSS with the PM6:L8-BO system, while PM6:PY-IT all-polymer OSCs improve PCE from 14.53 % to 15.22 %. AFM characterizations reveal that the introduction of the dopants have smoothened the surface morphology of spin-coated HTL films, which contributes towards more efficient charge extraction. In summary, this study not only presents a method of improving OSC efficiencies, but also provides insight and further possible directions towards anode optimization of OSCs.