| Literature DB >> 26166186 |
Sae Byeok Jo1, Hyun Ho Kim1, Hansol Lee1, Boseok Kang1, Seongkyu Lee1, Myungsun Sim1, Min Kim1, Wi Hyoung Lee2, Kilwon Cho1.
Abstract
Photon harvesting in organic solar cells is highly dependent on the anisotropic nature of the optoelectronic properties of photoactive materials. Here, we demonstrate an efficient approach to dramatically enhance photon harvesting in planar heterojunction solar cells by using a graphene-organic heterointerface. A large area, residue-free monolayer graphene is inserted at anode interface to serve as an atomically thin epitaxial template for growing highly orientated pentacene crystals with lying-down orientation. This anisotropic orientation enhances the overall optoelectronic properties, including light absorption, charge carrier lifetime, interfacial energetics, and especially the exciton diffusion length. Spectroscopic and crystallographic analysis reveal that the lying-down orientation persists until a thickness of 110 nm, which, along with increased exciton diffusion length up to nearly 100 nm, allows the device optimum thickness to be doubled to yield significantly enhanced light absorption within the photoactive layers. The resultant photovoltaic performance shows simultaneous increment in Voc, Jsc, and FF, and consequently a 5 times increment in the maximum power conversion efficiency than the equivalent devices without a graphene layer. The present findings indicate that controlling organic-graphene heterointerface could provide a design strategy of organic solar cell architecture for boosting photon harvesting.Entities:
Keywords: epitaxial growth; graphene; heterointerface; molecular orientation; organic solar cells; planar heterojunction
Year: 2015 PMID: 26166186 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b03929
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881