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A Dual-Polythiophene Blending Strategy to Reduce the Efficiency-Stability-Cost Gap of Solar Cells.
PubMed
Authors: Qi Q, Wang J, Gao M, Ke H, Zhao W, Zhang K, Li S, He C, Kuvondikov V, Ye L
Year
2024
Paper ID
9417
Status
Peer-reviewed
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
199
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Benefiting from the photovoltaic material innovation and delicate device optimization, high-efficiency solar cells employing polymeric materials are thriving. Reducing the gap of cost, efficiency, and stability is the critical challenge faced by the emerging solar cells such as organics, quantum dots and perovskites. Poly(3-alkylthiophene) demonstrates great potential in organic solar cells and quantum dot solar cells as the active layer or the hole transport layer due to its large scalability, excellent photoelectric performance, and favorable hydrophobicity. The present low efficiency and insufficient stability, restrict its commercial application. In this work, a facile strategy of blending two simple polythiophenes is put forward to manipulate the film microstructure and enhance the device efficiency and thermal stability of solar cells. The introduction of P3PT can improve the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of a benchmark cost-effective blend P3HT:O-IDTBR to 7.41%, and the developed ternary solar cells also exhibit increased thermal stability. More strikingly, the quantum dot solar cells with the dual-polythiophene hole transport layer achieve the highest PCE of 10.51%, which is among the topmost efficiencies for quantum dots/polythiophene solar cells. Together, this work provides an effective route to simultaneously optimize the device efficiency and thermal stability of solar cells.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Chemistry research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2024 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Benefiting from the photovoltaic material innovation and delicate device optimization, high-efficiency solar cells employing polymeric materials are thriving.
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