A Top-Down Strategy to Engineer ActiveLayer Morphology for Highly Efficient and Stable All-Polymer Solar Cells
- Authors
- Fu, Huiting; Peng, Zhengxing; Fan, Qunping; Lin, Francis R.; Qi, Feng; Ran, Yixin; Wu, Ziang; Fan, Baobing; Jiang, Kui; Woo, Han Young; Lu, Guanghao; Ade, Harald; Jen, Alex K-Y
- Issue Date
- 8월-2022
- Publisher
- WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
- Keywords
- all-polymer solar cells; blend morphology; device stability; layer-by-layer deposition; power conversion efficiency
- Citation
- ADVANCED MATERIALS, v.34, no.33
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- ADVANCED MATERIALS
- Volume
- 34
- Number
- 33
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/143823
- DOI
- 10.1002/adma.202202608
- ISSN
- 0935-9648
- Abstract
- A major challenge hindering the further development of all-polymer solar cells (all-PSCs) employing polymerized small-molecule acceptors is the relatively low fill factor (FF) due to the difficulty in controlling the active-layer morphology. The issues typically arise from oversized phase separation resulting from the thermodynamically unfavorable mixing between two macromolecular species, and disordered molecular orientation/packing of highly anisotropic polymer chains. Herein, a facile top-down controlling strategy to engineer the morphology of all-polymer blends is developed by leveraging the layer-by-layer (LBL) deposition. Optimal intermixing of polymer components can be achieved in the two-step process by tuning the bottom-layer polymer swelling during top-layer deposition. Consequently, both the molecular orientation/packing of the bottom layer and the molecular ordering of the top layer can be optimized with a suitable top-layer processing solvent. A favorable morphology with gradient vertical composition distribution for efficient charge transport and extraction is therefore realized, affording a high all-PSC efficiency of 17.0% with a FF of 76.1%. The derived devices also possess excellent long-term thermal stability and can retain >90% of their initial efficiencies after being annealed at 65 degrees C for 1300 h. These results validate the distinct advantages of employing an LBL processing protocol to fabricate high-performance all-PSCs.
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