Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/14110
Title: | Highly Efficient and Reproducible Nonfullerene Solar Cells from Hydrocarbon Solvents | Authors: | McCulloch, Iain Zhang, Weimin Amassian, Aram Little, Mark Pont, Sebastian Ashraf, Raja Shahid Hamid, Zeinab Neophytou, Marios Baran, Derya Wadsworth, Andrew Moser, Maximilian Durrant, James R. Abdelsamie, Maged |
Major Field of Science: | Engineering and Technology | Field Category: | Mechanical Engineering;Materials Engineering | Keywords: | Organic photovoltaics;Solar cells;Fullerenes | Issue Date: | 14-Jul-2017 | Source: | ACS Energy Letters, 2017, vol. 2, no. 7, pp. 1494-1500 | Volume: | 2 | Issue: | 7 | Start page: | 1494 | End page: | 1500 | Journal: | ACS Energy Letters | Abstract: | With chlorinated solvents unlikely to be permitted for use in solution-processed organic solar cells in industry, there must be a focus on developing nonchlorinated solvent systems. Here we report high-efficiency devices utilizing a low-bandgap donor polymer (PffBT4T-2DT) and a nonfullerene acceptor (EH-IDTBR) from hydrocarbon solvents and without using additives. When mesitylene was used as the solvent, rather than chlorobenzene, an improved power conversion efficiency (11.1%) was achieved without the need for pre- or post-treatments. Despite altering the processing conditions to environmentally friendly solvents and room-temperature coating, grazing incident X-ray measurements confirmed that active layers processed from hydrocarbon solvents retained the robust nanomorphology obtained with hot-processed chlorinated solvents. The main advantages of hydrocarbon solvent-processed devices, besides the improved efficiencies, were the reproducibility and storage lifetime of devices. Mesitylene devices showed better reproducibility and shelf life up to 4000 h with PCE dropping by only 8% of its initial value. | ISSN: | 23808195 | DOI: | 10.1021/acsenergylett.7b00390 | Rights: | © American Chemical Society | Type: | Article | Affiliation : | Imperial College London King Abdullah University of Science and Technology Swansea University Cyprus University of Technology |
Publication Type: | Peer Reviewed |
Appears in Collections: | Άρθρα/Articles |
CORE Recommender
SCOPUSTM
Citations
88
checked on Mar 14, 2024
WEB OF SCIENCETM
Citations
83
Last Week
0
0
Last month
1
1
checked on Oct 29, 2023
Page view(s) 50
384
Last Week
0
0
Last month
5
5
checked on Nov 7, 2024
Google ScholarTM
Check
Altmetric
Items in KTISIS are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.