Charge-generating mid-gap trap states define the thermodynamic limit of organic photovoltaic devices

Detailed balance is a cornerstone of our understanding of artificial light-harvesting systems. For next generation organic solar cells, this involves intermolecular charge-transfer (CT) states whose energies set the maximum open circuit voltage V OC . We have directly observed sub-gap states signifi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2020-11, Vol.11 (1), p.5567-10, Article 5567
Hauptverfasser: Zarrabi, Nasim, Sandberg, Oskar J., Zeiske, Stefan, Li, Wei, Riley, Drew B., Meredith, Paul, Armin, Ardalan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Detailed balance is a cornerstone of our understanding of artificial light-harvesting systems. For next generation organic solar cells, this involves intermolecular charge-transfer (CT) states whose energies set the maximum open circuit voltage V OC . We have directly observed sub-gap states significantly lower in energy than the CT states in the external quantum efficiency spectra of a significant number of organic semiconductor blends. Taking these states into account and using the principle of reciprocity between emission and absorption results in non-physical radiative limits for the V OC . We propose and provide compelling evidence for these states being non-equilibrium mid-gap traps which contribute to photocurrent by a non-linear process of optical release, upconverting them to the CT state. This motivates the implementation of a two-diode model which is often used in emissive inorganic semiconductors. The model accurately describes the dark current, V OC and the long-debated ideality factor in organic solar cells. Additionally, the charge-generating mid-gap traps have important consequences for our current understanding of both solar cells and photodiodes – in the latter case defining a detectivity limit several orders of magnitude lower than previously thought. The inability to accurately measure the charge-generating energy states in organic solar cells makes elucidating the photovoltaic effect in these devices difficult. Here, the authors report charge-generating mid-gap trap states in organic solar cells via ultra-sensitive photovoltaic measurements.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-020-19434-0