Progress in Materials, Solution Processes, and Long-Term Stability for Large-Area Organic Photovoltaics

Authors
Park, SungminKim, TaeheeYoon, SeongwonKoh, Chang WooWoo, Han YoungSon, Hae Jung
Issue Date
2020-12
Publisher
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
Citation
ADVANCED MATERIALS, v.32, no.51
Abstract
Organic solar cells based on bulk heterojunctions (BHJs) are attractive energy-conversion devices that can generate electricity from absorbed sunlight by dissociating excitons and collecting charge carriers. Recent breakthroughs attained by development of nonfullerene acceptors result in significant enhancement in power conversion efficiency (PCEs) exceeding 17%. However, most of researches have focused on pursuing high efficiency of small-area (<1 cm(2)) unit cells fabricated usually with spin coating. For practical application of organic photovoltaics (OPVs) from lab-scale unit cells to industrial products, it is essential to develop efficient technologies that can extend active area of devices with minimized loss of performance and ensured operational stability. In this progress report, an overview of recent advancements in materials and processing technologies is provided for transitioning from small-area laboratory-scale devices to large-area industrial scale modules. First, development of materials that satisfy requirements of high tolerability in active layer thickness and large-area adaptability is introduced. Second, morphology control using various coating techniques in a large active area is discussed. Third, the recent research progress is also underlined for understanding mechanisms of OPV degradation and studies for improving device long-term stability along with reliable evaluation procedures.
Keywords
POLYMER SOLAR-CELLS; HIGH-EFFICIENCY; OPERATIONAL STABILITY; FULLERENE ACCEPTORS; CONJUGATED POLYMERS; MODULE EFFICIENCY; HIGHLY EFFICIENT; DONOR POLYMERS; ITO-FREE; DEGRADATION; POLYMER SOLAR-CELLS; HIGH-EFFICIENCY; OPERATIONAL STABILITY; FULLERENE ACCEPTORS; CONJUGATED POLYMERS; MODULE EFFICIENCY; HIGHLY EFFICIENT; DONOR POLYMERS; ITO-FREE; DEGRADATION; large-area modules; morphology; nonfullerene acceptors; organic solar cells; stability
ISSN
0935-9648
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/117812
DOI
10.1002/adma.202002217
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2020
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