14 research outputs found

    Correlated Disorder Substrate‐Integrated Nanodisk Scatterers for Light Extraction in Organic Light Emitting Diodes

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    A major loss mechanism in organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) is the coupling of the emitter molecule light field to waveguide modes in the OLED thin film stack. In this work, a disordered 2D array of TiO2_{2} nanodisk scatterers is integrated into the OLED substrate to enable efficient light extraction from these waveguide modes. Fabrication of the nanodisks is based on a bottom-up, colloidal lithography technique and subsequent pattern transfer into high refractive index TiO2_{2} via reactive ion etching. The substrates are completed by spin-coating a polymer planarization layer before applying the OLED thin film stack. This ensures reproducible optoelectronic properties of the OLED through leaving the electrically active layers planar. Simultaneously, the nanodisks in close vicinity to the thin film stack ensure efficient out-of-plane scattering of waveguide modes. In a monochromatic OLED (center wavelength λ0_{0} = 520 nm), a 44.2%rel_{rel} increase in external quantum efficiency is achieved in comparison to a device without scattering structure. An in-depth numerical analysis reveals that this significant enhancement is only partly due to the out-coupling of waveguide modes. Additional enhancement is suspected to result from out-coupling of substrate modes through scattering by the nanodisks. Further improvements to the scattering structure are numerically evaluated

    From Groundwork to Efficient Solar Cells: On the Importance of the Substrate Material in Co‐Evaporated Perovskite Solar Cells

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    Vacuum‐based deposition of optoelectronic thin films has a long‐standing history. However, in the field of perovskite‐based photovoltaics, these techniques are still not as advanced as their solution‐based counterparts. Although high‐efficiency vacuum‐based perovskite solar cells reaching power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) above 20% are reported, the number of studies on the underlying physical and chemical mechanism of the co‐evaporation of lead iodide and methylammonium iodide is low. In this study, the impact of one of the most crucial process parameters in vacuum processes — the substrate material — is studied. It is shown that not only the morphology of the co‐evaporated perovskite thin films is significantly influenced by the surface polarity of the substrate material, but also the incorporation of the organic compound into the perovskite framework. Based on these studies, a selection guide for suitable substrate materials for efficient co‐evaporated perovskite thin films is derived. This selection guide points out that the organic vacuum‐processable hole transport material 2,2″,7,7″‐tetra(N,N‐di‐p‐tolyl)amino‐9,9‐spirobifluorene is an ideal candidate for the fabrication of efficient all‐evaporated perovskite solar cells, demonstrating PCEs above 19%. Furthermore, building on the insights into the formation of the perovskite thin films on different substrate materials, a basic crystallization model for co‐evaporated perovskite thin films is suggested

    Nanostructured front electrodes for perovskite/c-Si tandem photovoltaics

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    The rise in the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of perovskite solar cells has triggered enormous interest in perovskite-based tandem photovoltaics. One key challenge is to achieve high transmission of low energy photons into the bottom cell. Here, nanostructured front electrodes for 4-terminal perovskite/crystalline-silicon (perovskite/c-Si) tandem solar cells are developed by conformal deposition of indium tin oxide (ITO) on self-assembled polystyrene nanopillars. The nanostructured ITO is optimized for reduced reflection and increased transmission with a tradeoff in increased sheet resistance. In the optimum case, the nanostructured ITO electrodes enhance the transmittance by ∼7% (relative) compared to planar references. Perovskite/c-Si tandem devices with nanostructured ITO exhibit enhanced short-circuit current density (2.9 mA/cm2 absolute) and PCE (1.7% absolute) in the bottom c-Si solar cell compared to the reference. The improved light in-coupling is more pronounced for elevated angle of incidence. Energy yield enhancement up to ∼10% (relative) is achieved for perovskite/c-Si tandem architecture with the nanostructured ITO electrodes. It is also shown that these nanostructured ITO electrodes are also compatible with various other perovskite-based tandem architectures and bear the potential to improve the PCE up to 27.0%

    Bioinspired phase-separated disordered nanostructures for thin photovoltaic absorbers

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    The wings of the black butterfly, Pachliopta aristolochiae, are covered by micro- and nanostructured scales that harvest sunlight over a wide spectral and angular range. Considering that these properties are particularly attractive for photovoltaic applications, we analyze the contribution of these micro- and nanostructures, focusing on the structural disorder observed in the wing scales. In addition to microspectroscopy experiments, we conduct three-dimensional optical simulations of the exact scale structure. On the basis of these results, we design nanostructured thin photovoltaic absorbers of disordered nanoholes, which combine efficient light in-coupling and light-trapping properties together with a high angular robustness. Finally, inspired by the phase separation mechanism of self-assembled biophotonic nanostructures, we fabricate these bioinspired absorbers using a scalable, self-assembly patterning technique based on the phase separation of binary polymer mixture. The nanopatterned absorbers achieve a relative integrated absorption increase of 90% at a normal incident angle of light to as high as 200% at large incident angles, demonstrating the potential of black butterfly structures for light-harvesting purposes in thin-film solar cells

    From Groundwork to Efficient Solar Cells: On the Importance of the Substrate Material in Co‐Evaporated Perovskite Solar Cells

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    Vacuum-based deposition of optoelectronic thin films has a long-standing history. However, in the field of perovskite-based photovoltaics, these techniques are still not as advanced as their solution-based counterparts. Although high-efficiency vacuum-based perovskite solar cells reaching power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) above 20% are reported, the number of studies on the underlying physical and chemical mechanism of the co-evaporation of lead iodide and methylammonium iodide is low. In this study, the impact of one of the most crucial process parameters in vacuum processes—the substrate material—is studied. It is shown that not only the morphology of the co-evaporated perovskite thin films is significantly influenced by the surface polarity of the substrate material, but also the incorporation of the organic compound into the perovskite framework. Based on these studies, a selection guide for suitable substrate materials for efficient co-evaporated perovskite thin films is derived. This selection guide points out that the organic vacuum-processable hole transport material 2,2″,7,7″-tetra(N,N-di-p-tolyl)amino-9,9-spirobifluorene is an ideal candidate for the fabrication of efficient all-evaporated perovskite solar cells, demonstrating PCEs above 19%. Furthermore, building on the insights into the formation of the perovskite thin films on different substrate materials, a basic crystallization model for co-evaporated perovskite thin films is suggested

    On the fabrication of disordered nanostructures for light extraction in corrugated OLEDs

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    Light scattering OLED substrates relying on disordered self-assemblies are fabricated by microsphere and polymer blend lithography and used for light extraction. We report on a device efficiency enhancement of up to 50 %
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