Influence of Perfluorinated Ionomer in PEDOT:PSS on the Rectification and Degradation of Organic Photovoltaic Cells
Calvyn T. Howells, Sueda Saylan, Haeri Kim, Khalid Marbou, Tetsua, Aoyama, Aiko Nakao, Masanobu Uchiyama, Ifor D.W. Samuel, Dong-Wook Kim,, Marcus S. Dahlem, Pascal Andr\'e

TL;DR
This study investigates how perfluorinated ionomer additives in PEDOT:PSS influence the electrical properties, stability, and degradation mechanisms of organic photovoltaic cells, revealing optimal concentrations for performance and longevity improvements.
Contribution
It demonstrates the dual-regime effects of PFI on PEDOT:PSS, identifying a threshold concentration that enhances device stability and efficiency while elucidating degradation mitigation mechanisms.
Findings
PFI reduces OPV burn-in effects.
A threshold PFI concentration alters electronic properties.
PFI improves OPV stability and lifetime.
Abstract
Poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS) is widely used to build optoelectronic devices. However, as a hygroscopic water-based acidic material, it brings major concerns for stability and degradation, resulting in an intense effort to replace it in organic photovoltaic (OPV) devices. In this work, we focus on the perfluorinated ionomer (PFI) polymeric additive to PEDOT:PSS. We demonstrate that it can reduce the relative amplitude of OPV device burn-in, and find two distinct regimes of influence. At low concentrations there is a subtle effect on wetting and work function, for instance, with a detrimental impact on the device characteristics, and above a threshold it changes the electronic and device properties. The abrupt threshold in the conducting polymer occurs for PFI concentrations greater than or equal to the PSS concentration and was revealed by…
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