Concentrated sunlight for accelerated stability testing of organic photovoltaic materials: Towards decoupling light intensity and temperature
I. Visoly-Fisher, A. Mescheloff, M. Gabay, C. Bounioux, L. Zeiri, M., Sansotera, A. E. Goryachev, A. Braun, Y. Galagan, E.A. Katz

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the use of concentrated sunlight for accelerated stability testing of organic photovoltaic materials, allowing independent control of temperature and light intensity to better understand degradation mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method for decoupling light intensity and temperature in accelerated testing of OPV materials using concentrated sunlight.
Findings
Sunlight chopping effectively controls sample temperature.
Photo-oxidation causes degradation in P3HT:PCBM under concentrated sunlight.
Stable P3HT:PCBM films withstand up to 3,600 sun*hours, equivalent to 1.6 years of operation.
Abstract
We have demonstrated OPV accelerated degradation studies using concentrated sunlight, where the atmosphere, temperature and illumination intensity were independently controlled. Testing various schemes for controlling the sample temperature under concentrated sunlight showed that heating of P3HT:PCBM was caused by photons at the absorbed wavelength range and dissipation of excess photon energy, and not necessarily by IR photon absorption. Sunlight chopping was found to be an effective method for independent temperature control under illumination by concentrated sunlight. The first accelerated degradation tests using sunlight concentration applied to P3HT:PCBM blends were reported. P3HT:PCBM blends exposed to concentrated sunlight in the presence of traces of oxygen/ humidity showed degradation induced by photo-oxidation of the P3HT backbone within the P3HT:PCBM blend, which is…
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