Performance, Crystallinity and Charge Lifetime in a Scalable Organic Solar Cell
POSTER
Abstract
Organic solar cells (OSCs) are an emerging form of solar energy which can generate high performance, low-cost solar cells compared to traditional technology. However, the large-scale production of OSCs is limited by traditional spin coating techniques which can't be scaled up. A scalable deposition method is roll to roll manufacturing. Here we study the performance, charge carrier lifetime and morphology of an analogue of roll to roll (blade coating) to determine the morphological characteristics which result in superior performance. The same performance can be achieved with blade coating compared to spin coating while the crystallinity is different. Transient photovoltage measurements will determine the impact of crystallinity on charge lifetime. Understanding and controlling the interplay of these factors will improve OSC technology to ultimately replace traditional solar energy.
Publication: A. Rahman, A. Patterson, T. Melody, S. Pfleiger, A. Reale, B. A. Collins (2024). Robust Performance of PTQ10:DTY6 to deposition techniques and photovoltaic device configurations for halogen-free scale-up. In preparation.
Presenters
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Sydney Pfleiger
Linfield University
Authors
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Sydney Pfleiger
Linfield University
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Brian Akira Collins
Washington State University
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Acacia M Patterson
Washington State University, Oregon State University
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Tanner M Melody
Washington State University, San Jose State University
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Atiq Ur Rahman
University of Rome