Exploring nanoscale properties of organic solar cells

The demand for electrical energy is steadily increasing. Highly efficient organic solar cells based on mixed, strongly absorbing organic molecules convert sunlight into electricity and, thus, have the potential to contribute to the worlds energy production. The continuous development of new material...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mönch, Tobias
Other Authors: Technische Universität Dresden, Fakultät Mathematik und Naturwissenschaften
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Saechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden 2015
Subjects:
TEM
EDX
DFT
Online Access:http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-189348
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-189348
http://www.qucosa.de/fileadmin/data/qucosa/documents/18934/Dissertation_Tobias_Moench_Microscopic_Investigations_tufte.pdf
id ndltd-DRESDEN-oai-qucosa.de-bsz-14-qucosa-189348
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic pcAFM
STXM
NEXAFS
organische Solarzellen
TEM
EFTEM
STEM
EDX
CT Zustand
Monte Carlo
DFT
Simulation
pcAFM
STXM
NEXAFS
organic solar cells
TEM
EFTEM
STEM
EDX
CT state
Monte Carlo
DFT
simulation
ddc:530
rvk:VN 6057
spellingShingle pcAFM
STXM
NEXAFS
organische Solarzellen
TEM
EFTEM
STEM
EDX
CT Zustand
Monte Carlo
DFT
Simulation
pcAFM
STXM
NEXAFS
organic solar cells
TEM
EFTEM
STEM
EDX
CT state
Monte Carlo
DFT
simulation
ddc:530
rvk:VN 6057
Mönch, Tobias
Exploring nanoscale properties of organic solar cells
description The demand for electrical energy is steadily increasing. Highly efficient organic solar cells based on mixed, strongly absorbing organic molecules convert sunlight into electricity and, thus, have the potential to contribute to the worlds energy production. The continuous development of new materials during the last decades lead to a swift increase of power conversion efficiencies (PCE) of organic solar cells, recently reaching 12%. Despite these breakthroughs, the usage of highly complex organic molecules blended together to form a self-organised absorber layer results in complicated morphologies that are poorly understood. However, the morphology has a tremendous impact on the photon-to-electron conversion, affecting all processes ranging from light absorption to charge carrier extraction. This dissertation studies the role of phase-separation of the self-organised thin film blend layers utilized in organic solar cells. On the molecular scale, we manipulate the phase-separation, using different molecule combinations ranging from the well-known ZnPc:C 60 blend layers to highly efficient oligothiophene:C60 blend layers. On the macroscopic scale, we shape the morphology by depositing the aforementioned blend layers on differently heated substrates (in-vacuo substrate temperature, Tsub). To characterise the manufactured blend layers, we utilize high resolution microscopy techniques such as photoconductive atomic force microscopy, different electron microscopic techniques, X-ray microscopy etc., and various established and newly developed computational simulations to rationalise the experimental findings. This multi-technique, multi-scale approach fulfils the demands of several scientific articles to analyse a wide range of length scales to understand the underlying optoelectronic processes. Varying the mixing ratio of a ZnPc:C60 blend layer from 2:1 to 6:1 at fixed in vacuo substrate temperature results in a continuous increase of surface roughness, decrease of short-circuit current, and decrease of crystallinity. Additionally performed density functional theory calculations and 3D drift-diffusion simulations explain the observed crystalline ZnPc nanorod formation by the presence of C60 in the bulk volume and the in turn lowered recombination at crystalline ZnPc nanorods. Moving to oligothiophene:C60 blend layers used in highly efficient organic solar cells deposited at elevated substrate temperatures, we find an increase of phase-separation, surface roughness, decrease of oligothiophene-C60 contacts, and reduced disorder upon increasing Tsub from RT (PCE=4.5%) to 80 °C (PCE=6.8%). At Tsub =140 °C, we observe the formation of micrometer-sized aggregates on the surface resulting in inhomogeneous light absorption and charge carrier extraction, which in turn massively lowers the power conversion efficiency to 1.9%. Subtly changing the molecular structure of the oligothiophene molecule by attaching two additional methyl side chains affects the thin film growth, which is also dependent on the substrate type. In conclusion, the utilized highly sensitive characterisation methods are suitable to study the impact of the morphology on the device performance of all kinds of organic electronic devices, as we demonstrate for organic blend layers. At the prototypical ZnPc:C60 blend, we discovered a way to grow ZnPc nanorods from the blend layer. These nanorods are highly crystalline and facilitate a lowered charge carrier recombination which is highly desirable in organic solar cells. The obtained results at oligothiophene: C60 blends clearly demonstrate the universality of the multi-technique approach for an in-depth understanding of the fragile interplay between phase-separation and phase-connectivity in efficient organic solar cells. Overall, we can conclude that both molecular structure and external processing parameters affect the morphology in manifold ways and, thus, need to be considered already at the synthesis of new materials.
author2 Technische Universität Dresden, Fakultät Mathematik und Naturwissenschaften
author_facet Technische Universität Dresden, Fakultät Mathematik und Naturwissenschaften
Mönch, Tobias
author Mönch, Tobias
author_sort Mönch, Tobias
title Exploring nanoscale properties of organic solar cells
title_short Exploring nanoscale properties of organic solar cells
title_full Exploring nanoscale properties of organic solar cells
title_fullStr Exploring nanoscale properties of organic solar cells
title_full_unstemmed Exploring nanoscale properties of organic solar cells
title_sort exploring nanoscale properties of organic solar cells
publisher Saechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden
publishDate 2015
url http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-189348
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-189348
http://www.qucosa.de/fileadmin/data/qucosa/documents/18934/Dissertation_Tobias_Moench_Microscopic_Investigations_tufte.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT monchtobias exploringnanoscalepropertiesoforganicsolarcells
_version_ 1718491996439445504
spelling ndltd-DRESDEN-oai-qucosa.de-bsz-14-qucosa-1893482017-07-07T03:33:11Z Exploring nanoscale properties of organic solar cells Mönch, Tobias pcAFM STXM NEXAFS organische Solarzellen TEM EFTEM STEM EDX CT Zustand Monte Carlo DFT Simulation pcAFM STXM NEXAFS organic solar cells TEM EFTEM STEM EDX CT state Monte Carlo DFT simulation ddc:530 rvk:VN 6057 The demand for electrical energy is steadily increasing. Highly efficient organic solar cells based on mixed, strongly absorbing organic molecules convert sunlight into electricity and, thus, have the potential to contribute to the worlds energy production. The continuous development of new materials during the last decades lead to a swift increase of power conversion efficiencies (PCE) of organic solar cells, recently reaching 12%. Despite these breakthroughs, the usage of highly complex organic molecules blended together to form a self-organised absorber layer results in complicated morphologies that are poorly understood. However, the morphology has a tremendous impact on the photon-to-electron conversion, affecting all processes ranging from light absorption to charge carrier extraction. This dissertation studies the role of phase-separation of the self-organised thin film blend layers utilized in organic solar cells. On the molecular scale, we manipulate the phase-separation, using different molecule combinations ranging from the well-known ZnPc:C 60 blend layers to highly efficient oligothiophene:C60 blend layers. On the macroscopic scale, we shape the morphology by depositing the aforementioned blend layers on differently heated substrates (in-vacuo substrate temperature, Tsub). To characterise the manufactured blend layers, we utilize high resolution microscopy techniques such as photoconductive atomic force microscopy, different electron microscopic techniques, X-ray microscopy etc., and various established and newly developed computational simulations to rationalise the experimental findings. This multi-technique, multi-scale approach fulfils the demands of several scientific articles to analyse a wide range of length scales to understand the underlying optoelectronic processes. Varying the mixing ratio of a ZnPc:C60 blend layer from 2:1 to 6:1 at fixed in vacuo substrate temperature results in a continuous increase of surface roughness, decrease of short-circuit current, and decrease of crystallinity. Additionally performed density functional theory calculations and 3D drift-diffusion simulations explain the observed crystalline ZnPc nanorod formation by the presence of C60 in the bulk volume and the in turn lowered recombination at crystalline ZnPc nanorods. Moving to oligothiophene:C60 blend layers used in highly efficient organic solar cells deposited at elevated substrate temperatures, we find an increase of phase-separation, surface roughness, decrease of oligothiophene-C60 contacts, and reduced disorder upon increasing Tsub from RT (PCE=4.5%) to 80 °C (PCE=6.8%). At Tsub =140 °C, we observe the formation of micrometer-sized aggregates on the surface resulting in inhomogeneous light absorption and charge carrier extraction, which in turn massively lowers the power conversion efficiency to 1.9%. Subtly changing the molecular structure of the oligothiophene molecule by attaching two additional methyl side chains affects the thin film growth, which is also dependent on the substrate type. In conclusion, the utilized highly sensitive characterisation methods are suitable to study the impact of the morphology on the device performance of all kinds of organic electronic devices, as we demonstrate for organic blend layers. At the prototypical ZnPc:C60 blend, we discovered a way to grow ZnPc nanorods from the blend layer. These nanorods are highly crystalline and facilitate a lowered charge carrier recombination which is highly desirable in organic solar cells. The obtained results at oligothiophene: C60 blends clearly demonstrate the universality of the multi-technique approach for an in-depth understanding of the fragile interplay between phase-separation and phase-connectivity in efficient organic solar cells. Overall, we can conclude that both molecular structure and external processing parameters affect the morphology in manifold ways and, thus, need to be considered already at the synthesis of new materials. Saechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden Technische Universität Dresden, Fakultät Mathematik und Naturwissenschaften Prof. Dr. Karl Leo Prof. Dr. Karl Leo Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Wenzel 2015-11-30 doc-type:doctoralThesis application/pdf http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-189348 urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-189348 PPN454632215 http://www.qucosa.de/fileadmin/data/qucosa/documents/18934/Dissertation_Tobias_Moench_Microscopic_Investigations_tufte.pdf eng