| Literature DB >> 25942074 |
Kevin J Bergemann1, Jojo A Amonoo1, Byeongseop Song1, Peter F Green1, Stephen R Forrest1.
Abstract
We find that mixtures of C60 with the wide energy gap, small molecular weight semiconductor bathophenanthroline (BPhen) exhibit a combination of surprisingly high electron conductivity and efficient exciton blocking when employed as buffer layers in organic photovoltaic cells. Photoluminescence quenching measurements show that a 1:1 BPhen/C60 mixed layer has an exciton blocking efficiency of 84 ± 5% compared to that of 100% for a neat BPhen layer. This high blocking efficiency is accompanied by a 100-fold increase in electron conductivity compared with neat BPhen. Transient photocurrent measurements show that charge transport through a neat BPhen buffer is dispersive, in contrast to nondispersive transport in the compound buffer. Interestingly, although the conductivity is high, there is no clearly defined insulating-to-conducting phase transition with increased insulating BPhen fraction. Thus, we infer that C60 undergoes nanoscale (<10 nm domain size) phase segregation even at very high (>80%) BPhen fractions.Entities:
Keywords: Organic photovoltaics; charge transfer; charge transport; diffusion; organic buffer layer; percolation
Year: 2015 PMID: 25942074 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b00908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189