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Journal article

On the stability of a variety of organic photovoltaic devices by IPCE and in situ IPCE analyses – the ISOS-3 inter-laboratory collaboration

From

Laboratory of Nanostructured Materials for Photovoltaic Energy1

Hasselt University2

Ilmenau University of Technology3

TÜBITAK National Metrology Institute4

Brookhaven National Laboratory5

Stichting Katholieke Universiteit6

Dresden University of Technology7

Department of Energy Conversion and Storage, Technical University of Denmark8

Imaging and Structural Analysis, Department of Energy Conversion and Storage, Technical University of Denmark9

National Renewable Energy Laboratory10

Holst Centre11

Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft12

Functional organic materials, Department of Energy Conversion and Storage, Technical University of Denmark13

...and 3 more

This work is part of the inter-laboratory collaboration to study the stability of seven distinct sets of state-of-the-art organic photovoltaic (OPV) devices prepared by leading research laboratories. All devices have been shipped to and degraded at RISØ-DTU up to 1830 hours in accordance with established ISOS-3 protocols under defined illumination conditions.

In this work, we apply the Incident Photon-to-Electron Conversion Efficiency (IPCE) and the in situ IPCE techniques to determine the relation between solar cell performance and solar cell stability. Different ageing conditions were considered: accelerated full sun simulation, low level indoor fluorescent lighting and dark storage.

The devices were also monitored under conditions of ambient and inert (N2) atmospheres, which allows for the identification of the solar cell materials more susceptible to degradation by ambient air (oxygen and moisture). The different OPVs configurations permitted the study of the intrinsic stability of the devices depending on: two different ITO-replacement alternatives, two different hole extraction layers (PEDOT:PSS and MoO3), and two different P3HT-based polymers.

The response of un-encapsulated devices to ambient atmosphere offered insight into the importance of moisture in solar cell performance. Our results demonstrate that the IPCE and the in situ IPCE techniques are valuable analytical methods to understand device degradation and solar cell lifetime.

Language: English
Publisher: The Royal Society of Chemistry
Year: 2012
Pages: 11824-11845
ISSN: 14639084 and 14639076
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1039/C2CP40821J
ORCIDs: Norrman, Kion , Hösel, Markus , Jørgensen, Mikkel , Gevorgyan, Suren , Vesterager Madsen, Morten , Bundgaard, Eva and Krebs, Frederik C

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