Abstract

Charge generation and recombination processes occurring in ternary photoactive copolymer:copolymer:fullerene blends consisting of different mixing ratios between entirely amorphous and semi-crystalline PPE-PPV copolymers are investigated by transient absorption pump-probe and pump-push photocurrent spectroscopy. The experiments reveal that an excess of semi-crystalline polymer facilitates exciton dissociation into free charge carriers, slows down geminate recombination, and suppresses non-geminate recombination leading to increased short-circuit currents and high fill factors. In contrast, blends utilizing solely the amorphous polymer for their donor phase suffer from a large fraction of sub-nanosecond geminate recombination of interfacially bound charge-transfer states and also from fast non-geminate recombination of free charges, resulting in a significantly reduced photovoltaic performance. However, small fractions of the amorphous polymer blended into the semi-crystalline polymer increase the open-circuit voltage and the fill factor, while keeping the charge generation and recombination parameters largely unaltered in turn leading to an optimized device performance for the ternary PPE-PPV copolymer:copolymer:fullerene blends.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call