Literature DB >> 23570319

Improved open-circuit voltage in polymer/oxide-nanoarray hybrid solar cells by formation of homogeneous metal oxide core/shell structures.

Fan Wu1, Qi Cui, Zeliang Qiu, Changwen Liu, Hui Zhang, Wei Shen, Mingtai Wang.   

Abstract

Incorporation of vertically aligned nanorod/nanowire arrays of metal oxide (oxide-NAs) with a polymer can produce efficient hybrid solar cells with an ideal bulk-heterojunction architecture. However, polymer/oxide-NAs solar cells still suffer from a rather low (normally, < 0.4 V) open-circuit voltage (Voc). Here we demonstrate, for the first time, a novel strategy to improve the Voc in polymer/oxide-NAs solar cells by formation of homogeneous core/shell structures and reveal the intrinsic principles involved therein. A feasible hydrothermal-solvothermal combined method is developed for preparing homogeneous core/shell nanoarrays of metal oxides with a single-crystalline nanorod as core and the aggregation layer of corresponding metal oxide quantum dots (QDs) as shell, and the shell thickness (L) is easily controlled by the solvothermal reaction time for growing QDs on the nanorod. The core/shell formation dramatically improves the device Voc up to ca. 0.7-0.8 V depending on L. Based on steady-state and dynamic measurements, as well as modeling by space-charge-limited current method, it is found that the improved Voc originates from the up-shifted conduction band edge in the core by the interfacial dipole field resulting from the decreased mobility difference between photogenerated electrons and holes after the shell growth, which increases the energy difference between the quasi-Fermi levels of photogenerated electrons in the core and holes in the polymer for a higher Voc. Our results indicate that increasing Voc by the core/shell strategy seems not to be dependent on the kinds of metal oxides.

Entities:  

Year:  2013        PMID: 23570319     DOI: 10.1021/am400281s

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Appl Mater Interfaces        ISSN: 1944-8244            Impact factor:   9.229


  2 in total

1.  High efficiency hybrid silicon nanopillar-polymer solar cells.

Authors:  Pushpa Raj Pudasaini; Francisco Ruiz-Zepeda; Manisha Sharma; David Elam; Arturo Ponce; Arturo A Ayon
Journal:  ACS Appl Mater Interfaces       Date:  2013-09-25       Impact factor: 9.229

2.  Balanced Dipole Effects on Interfacial Engineering for Polymer/TiO2 Array Hybrid Solar Cells.

Authors:  Fan Wu; Yanyan Zhu; Xunheng Ye; Xiaoyi Li; Yanhua Tong; Jiaxing Xu
Journal:  Nanoscale Res Lett       Date:  2017-02-03       Impact factor: 4.703

  2 in total

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