Abstract

We report the effects of layer thickness, interface morphology, top contact, and polymer–metal combination on the performance of photovoltaic devices consisting of a fluorene–bithiophene copolymer and nanocrystalline TiO2. Efficient photoinduced charge transfer is observed in this system, while charge recombination is relatively slow (∼100 μs–10 ms). External quantum efficiencies of 13% and monochromatic power conversion efficiencies of 1.4% at a wavelength of 440 nm are achieved in the best device reported here. The device produced an open-circuit voltage of 0.92 V, short-circuit current density of about 400 μA cm−2, and a fill factor of 0.44 under simulated air mass 1.5 illumination. We find that the short-circuit current density and the fill factor increase with decreasing polymer thickness. We propose that the performance of the indium tin oxide/TiO2/polymer/metal devices is limited by the energy step at the polymer/metal interface and we investigate this situation using an alternative fluorene-based polymer and different top contact metals.

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