Decohesion
Kinetics in Polymer Organic Solar Cells
Posted on 2014-12-10 - 00:00
We investigate the role of molecular
weight (MW) of the photoactive polymer
poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) on the temperature-dependent decohesion
kinetics of bulk heterojunction (BHJ) organic solar cells (OSCs).
The MW of P3HT has been directly correlated
to its carrier field effect mobilities and the ambient temperature
also affects OSC in-service performance and P3HT arrangement within
the BHJ layer. Under inert conditions, time-dependent decohesion readily
occurs within the BHJ layer at loads well below its fracture resistance.
We observe that by increasing the MW of
P3HT, greater resistance to decohesion is achieved. However, failure
consistently occurs within the BHJ layer representing the weakest
layer within the device stack. Additionally, it was found that at
temperatures below the glass transition temperature (∼41–45
°C), decohesion was characterized by brittle failure via molecular
bond rupture. Above the glass transition temperature, decohesion growth
occurred by a viscoelastic process in the BHJ layer, leading to a
significant degree of viscoelastic deformation. We develop a viscoelastic
model based on molecular relaxation to describe the resulting behavior.
The study has implications for OSC long-term reliability and device
performance, which are important for OSC production and implementation.
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Bruner, Christopher; Novoa, Fernando; Dupont, Stephanie; Dauskardt, Reinhold (2016). Decohesion
Kinetics in Polymer Organic Solar Cells. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/am506482q