What Makes Thickness‐Tolerant Organic Solar Cells?
Advanced Energy Materials, EarlyView.
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High-throughput experiments, simulations, and machine learning methods are leveraged to disentangle the material and device properties that enable concurrent high-performing and thick-film organic solar cells.
Abstract
Relatively thick-film organic photovoltaics (OPVs) are desirable to spark commercialization through mass-printing methods. Thickness-resilient donor:acceptor blends are, however, scarce and not fully understood. The interplay between electronic, optical, and microstructural properties of the photoactive layer (PAL) generates a multi-parametric space where rationalization is far from trivial. In this work, high-throughput experimentation, simulations, and machine learning (ML) methods are leveraged to provide material and device insights toward thickness-resilient OPVs. From a database of 720 inverted devices and 20 different donor:acceptor blends, two main blend families are identified in terms of their resilience against increased PAL thickness (>200 nm). These are archetypically represented by PBDB-T:ITIC (thickness-sensitive) and PTQ10:Y6 (thickness-resilient). Kinetic Monte Carlo (kMC) simulations elucidate that the blend morphology alone, either in the form of an effective medium or energy cascade, can explain the experimental short-circuit current density and open-circuit voltage trends without tweaking the recombination parameters (cf. drift-diffusion, DD). High fill factors (FFs) in thick-film devices cannot, however, be reproduced by the kMC or DD simulations. ML models show that complementary absorbing donors and acceptors (shifted absorption onsets) mixed in balanced weight ratios provide a favorable hole back-transfer efficiency to increase the FF in thick-film devices.