Polyethylenimine
Interfacial Layers in Inverted Organic
Photovoltaic Devices: Effects of Ethoxylation and Molecular Weight
on Efficiency and Temporal Stability
posted on 2015-12-02, 00:00authored byBrett
A. E. Courtright, Samson A. Jenekhe
We report a comparative study of
polyethylenimine (PEI) and ethoxylated-polyethylenimine
(PEIE) cathode buffer layers in high performance inverted organic
photovoltaic devices. The work function of the indium–tin oxide
(ITO)/zinc oxide (ZnO) cathode was reduced substantially (Δφ
= 0.73–1.09 eV) as the molecular weight of PEI was varied from
800 g mol–1 to 750 000 g mol–1 compared with the observed much smaller reduction when using a PEIE
thin film (Δφ = 0.56 eV). The reference inverted polymer
solar cells based on the small band gap polymer PBDTT-FTTE (ITO/ZnO/PBDTT-FTTE:PC70BM/MoO3/Ag), without a cathode buffer layer, had
an average power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 6.06 ± 0.22%.
Incorporation of a PEIE cathode buffer layer in the same PBDTT-FTTE:PC70BM blend devices gave an enhanced performance with a PCE
of 7.37 ± 0.53%. In contrast, an even greater photovoltaic efficiency
with a PCE of 8.22 ± 0.10% was obtained in similar PBDTT-FTTE:PC70BM blend solar cells containing a PEI cathode buffer layer.
The temporal stability of the inverted polymer solar cells was found
to increase with increasing molecular weight of the cathode buffer
layer. The results show that PEI is superior to PEIE as a cathode
buffer layer in high performance organic photovoltaic devices and
that the highest molecular weight PEI interlayer provides the highest
temporal stability.