Charge density dependent nongeminate recombination in organic bulk heterojunction solar cells
D. Rauh, C. Deibel, V. Dyakonov

TL;DR
This study investigates the mechanisms behind high recombination orders in organic solar cells, revealing that charge carrier density-dependent mobility and detrapping processes are key factors, with implications for device efficiency.
Contribution
It clarifies the dominant mechanisms of nongeminate recombination in organic solar cells, emphasizing the roles of charge carrier mobility and phase separation effects.
Findings
Recombination orders exceed two in organic solar cells.
Charge mobility and recombination prefactor depend differently on charge density.
Detrapping limited recombination explains high recombination orders.
Abstract
Apparent recombination orders exceeding the value of two expected for bimolecular recombination have been reported for organic solar cells in various publications. Two prominent explanations are bimolecular losses with a carrier concentration dependent prefactor due to a trapping limited mobility, and protection of trapped charge carriers from recombination by a donor--acceptor phase separation until reemission from these deep states. In order to clarify which mechanism is dominant we performed temperature and illumination dependent charge extraction measurements under open circuit as well as short circuit conditions at poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl):[6,6]-phenyl-Cbutyric acid methyl ester (P3HT:PCBM) and PTB7:PCBM (Poly[[4,8-bis[(2-ethylhexyl)oxy]benzo[1,2-b:4,5-b']dithiophene-2,6-diyl][3-fluoro-2-[(2-ethylhexyl)carbonyl]thieno[3,4-b]thiophenediyl]]) solar cells…
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