Mapping Interfacial Energetic Landscape in Organic Solar Cells Reveals Pathways to Reducing Nonradiative Losses
Gaurab J. Thapa, Mihirsinh Chauhan, Jacob P. Mauthe, Daniel B., Dougherty, Aram Amassian

TL;DR
This study maps the energetic landscape of organic solar cell interfaces, linking interfacial disorder and energy offsets to nonradiative losses, and proposes design strategies for low-loss devices.
Contribution
It introduces a combined spatial and energetic mapping method to analyze charge transfer states and interface disorder in BHJs, revealing pathways to reduce nonradiative recombination.
Findings
Identified specific interfaces with low-energy CT states.
Quantified interfacial energetic disorder and its impact on losses.
Demonstrated that sharp D/A interfaces with low S1-CT offset minimize nonradiative losses.
Abstract
Bulk heterojunction (BHJ) organic solar cells have made remarkable inroads towards 20% efficiency, yet nonradiative recombination losses ({\Delta}Vnr) remain high compared to silicon and perovskite photovoltaics. Interfaces buried within BHJ blends hold the key to recombination losses but access to their energetic landscape underpinning charge transfer (CT) states and their disorder remain elusive. Here, we reveal the energetic landscape and CT state manifold of modern BHJs with both spatial and energetic resolutions and link the offset between singlet (ES1) and CT energy (ES1-CT) and interfacial energetic disorder with {\Delta}Vnr. We do so by locally mapping the energy distributions of modern PM6-based BHJs with IT4F, Y6 and PC71BM acceptors and combine it, for the first time, with sensitive EQE measurements, to visualize and quantify donor (D) and acceptor (A) energetics at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrganic Electronics and Photovoltaics · Silicon and Solar Cell Technologies · Conducting polymers and applications
