Experimental investigation of the interfacial fracture toughness in organic photovoltaics

The development of organic photovoltaics (OPVs) has attracted a lot of attention due to their potential to create a low cost flexible solar cell platform. In general, an OPV is comprised of a number of layers of thin films that include the electrodes, active layers and barrier films. Thus, with al...

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Main Author: Kim, Yongjin
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/47608
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-476082013-08-10T03:13:58ZExperimental investigation of the interfacial fracture toughness in organic photovoltaicsKim, YongjinPhotovoltaicsAdhesionInterfacial fracture toughnessOrganic solar cellsPhotovoltaic power generationOrganic semiconductorsPhotovoltaic cellsAdhesionThe development of organic photovoltaics (OPVs) has attracted a lot of attention due to their potential to create a low cost flexible solar cell platform. In general, an OPV is comprised of a number of layers of thin films that include the electrodes, active layers and barrier films. Thus, with all of the interfaces within OPV devices, the potential for failure exists in numerous locations if adhesion at the interface between layers is inherently low or if a loss of adhesion due to device aging is encountered. To date, few studies have focused on the basic properties of adhesion in organic photovoltaics and its implications on device reliability. In this dissertation, we investigated the adhesion between interfaces for a model multilayer barrier film (SiNx/PMMA) used to encapsulate OPVs. The barrier films were manufactured using plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) and the interfacial fracture toughness (Gc, J/m2) between the SiNx and PMMA were quantified. The fundamentals of the adhesion at these interfaces and methods to increase the adhesion were investigated. In addition, we investigated the adhesive/cohesive behavior of inverted OPVs with different electrode materials and interface treatments. Inverted OPVs were fabricated incorporating different interface modification techniques to understand their impact on adhesion determined through the interfacial fracture toughness (Gc, J/m2). Overall, the goal of this study is to quantify the adhesion at typical interfaces used in inverted OPVs and barrier films, to understand methods that influence the adhesion, and to determine methods to improve the adhesion for the long term mechanical reliability of OPV devices.Georgia Institute of Technology2013-06-15T02:45:43Z2013-06-15T02:45:43Z2013-04-01Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/47608
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Photovoltaics
Adhesion
Interfacial fracture toughness
Organic solar cells
Photovoltaic power generation
Organic semiconductors
Photovoltaic cells
Adhesion
spellingShingle Photovoltaics
Adhesion
Interfacial fracture toughness
Organic solar cells
Photovoltaic power generation
Organic semiconductors
Photovoltaic cells
Adhesion
Kim, Yongjin
Experimental investigation of the interfacial fracture toughness in organic photovoltaics
description The development of organic photovoltaics (OPVs) has attracted a lot of attention due to their potential to create a low cost flexible solar cell platform. In general, an OPV is comprised of a number of layers of thin films that include the electrodes, active layers and barrier films. Thus, with all of the interfaces within OPV devices, the potential for failure exists in numerous locations if adhesion at the interface between layers is inherently low or if a loss of adhesion due to device aging is encountered. To date, few studies have focused on the basic properties of adhesion in organic photovoltaics and its implications on device reliability. In this dissertation, we investigated the adhesion between interfaces for a model multilayer barrier film (SiNx/PMMA) used to encapsulate OPVs. The barrier films were manufactured using plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) and the interfacial fracture toughness (Gc, J/m2) between the SiNx and PMMA were quantified. The fundamentals of the adhesion at these interfaces and methods to increase the adhesion were investigated. In addition, we investigated the adhesive/cohesive behavior of inverted OPVs with different electrode materials and interface treatments. Inverted OPVs were fabricated incorporating different interface modification techniques to understand their impact on adhesion determined through the interfacial fracture toughness (Gc, J/m2). Overall, the goal of this study is to quantify the adhesion at typical interfaces used in inverted OPVs and barrier films, to understand methods that influence the adhesion, and to determine methods to improve the adhesion for the long term mechanical reliability of OPV devices.
author Kim, Yongjin
author_facet Kim, Yongjin
author_sort Kim, Yongjin
title Experimental investigation of the interfacial fracture toughness in organic photovoltaics
title_short Experimental investigation of the interfacial fracture toughness in organic photovoltaics
title_full Experimental investigation of the interfacial fracture toughness in organic photovoltaics
title_fullStr Experimental investigation of the interfacial fracture toughness in organic photovoltaics
title_full_unstemmed Experimental investigation of the interfacial fracture toughness in organic photovoltaics
title_sort experimental investigation of the interfacial fracture toughness in organic photovoltaics
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/47608
work_keys_str_mv AT kimyongjin experimentalinvestigationoftheinterfacialfracturetoughnessinorganicphotovoltaics
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