3 research outputs found
Robot-Based High-Throughput Engineering of Alcoholic Polymer: Fullerene Nanoparticle Inks for an Eco-Friendly Processing of Organic Solar Cells
Development
of high-quality organic nanoparticle inks is a significant scientific
challenge for the industrial production of solution-processed organic
photovoltaics (OPVs) with eco-friendly processing methods. In this
work, we demonstrate a novel, robot-based, high-throughput procedure
performing automatic polyÂ(3-hexylthio-phene-2,5-diyl) and indene-C<sub>60</sub> bisadduct nanoparticle ink synthesis in nontoxic alcohols.
A novel methodology to prepare particle dispersions for fully functional
OPVs by manipulating the particle size and solvent system was studied
in detail. The ethanol dispersion with a particle diameter of around
80–100 nm exhibits reduced degradation, yielding a power conversion
efficiency of 4.52%, which is the highest performance reported so
far for water/alcohol-processed OPV devices. By successfully deploying
the high-throughput robot-based approach for an organic nanoparticle
ink preparation, we believe that the findings demonstrated in this
work will trigger more research interest and effort on eco-friendly
industrial production of OPVs
Robot-Based High-Throughput Engineering of Alcoholic Polymer: Fullerene Nanoparticle Inks for an Eco-Friendly Processing of Organic Solar Cells
Development
of high-quality organic nanoparticle inks is a significant scientific
challenge for the industrial production of solution-processed organic
photovoltaics (OPVs) with eco-friendly processing methods. In this
work, we demonstrate a novel, robot-based, high-throughput procedure
performing automatic polyÂ(3-hexylthio-phene-2,5-diyl) and indene-C<sub>60</sub> bisadduct nanoparticle ink synthesis in nontoxic alcohols.
A novel methodology to prepare particle dispersions for fully functional
OPVs by manipulating the particle size and solvent system was studied
in detail. The ethanol dispersion with a particle diameter of around
80–100 nm exhibits reduced degradation, yielding a power conversion
efficiency of 4.52%, which is the highest performance reported so
far for water/alcohol-processed OPV devices. By successfully deploying
the high-throughput robot-based approach for an organic nanoparticle
ink preparation, we believe that the findings demonstrated in this
work will trigger more research interest and effort on eco-friendly
industrial production of OPVs
Understanding and controlling the evolution of nanomorphology and crystallinity of organic bulk-heterojunction blends with solvent vapor annealing
Solvent vapor annealing (SVA) has been shown to significantly improve the device performance of organic bulk-heterojunction solar cells, yet the mechanisms linking nanomorphology, crystallinity of the active layer, and performance are still largely missing. Here, the mechanisms are tackled by correlating the evolution of nanomorphology, crystallinity, and performance with advanced transmission electron microscopy methods systematically. Model system of DRCN5T:PC71BM blends are SVA treated with four solvents differing in their donor and acceptor solubilities. The choice of solvent drastically influences the rate at which the maximum device efficiency establishes, though similar values can be achieved for all solvents. The donor solubility is identified as a key parameter that controls the kinetics of diffusion and crystallization of the blend molecules, resulting in an inverse relationship between optimal annealing time and donor solubility. For the highest efficiency, optimum domain size and single-crystalline nature of DRCN5T fibers are found to be crucial. Moreover, the π–π stacking orientation of the crystallites is directly revealed and related to the nanomorphology, providing insight into the charge carrier transport pathways. Finally, a qualitative model relating morphology, crystallinity, and device efficiency evolution during SVA is presented, which may be transferred to other light-harvesting blends.</p