# Organic solar cell design as a function of radiative quantum efficiency

**Authors:** Blaise Godefroid, Gregory Kozyreff

arXiv: 1705.07814 · 2017-10-04

## TL;DR

This paper investigates how radiative quantum efficiency influences organic solar cell design, showing that optimizing fluorescence-related parameters can significantly enhance power conversion efficiency.

## Contribution

It introduces a method to optimize organic solar cell design by considering radiative quantum efficiency and fluorescence effects, improving efficiency predictions and performance.

## Key findings

- Optimizing buffer layer thicknesses increases efficiency from 11.3% to 12.7%.
- Ignoring fluorescence dependence leads to sub-optimal designs.
- Radiative losses significantly alter optimal cell parameters.

## Abstract

We study the radiative decay, or fluorescence, of excitons in organic solar cells as a function of its geometrical parameters. Contrary to their non-radiative counterpart, fluorescence losses strongly depend on the environment. By properly tuning the thicknesses of the buffer layers between the active regions of the cell and the electrodes, the exciton lifetime and, hence, the exciton diffusion length can be increased. The importance of this phenomenon depends on the radiative quantum efficiency, which is the fraction of the exciton decay that is intrinsically due to fluorescence. Besides this effect, interferences within the cell control the efficiency of sunlight injection into the active layers. An optimal cell design must rely on the consideration of these two aspects. By properly managing fluorescence losses, one can significantly improve the cell performance. To demonstrate this fact, we use realistic material parameters inspired from literature data and obtain an increase of power conversion efficiency from 11.3% to 12.7%. Conversely, not to take into account the strong dependence of fluorescence on the environment may lead to a sub-optimal cell design and a degradation of cell performance. The presence of radiative losses, however small, significantly changes the optimal thicknesses. We illustrate this latter situation with experimental material data.

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.07814/full.md

## References

69 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.07814/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.07814