TY - JOUR
T1 - A High Throughput Platform to Minimize Voltage and Fill Factor Losses
AU - Haffner‐Schirmer, Julian Matthias
AU - Corre, Vincent Marc Le
AU - Forberich, Karen
AU - Egelhaaf, Hans Joachim
AU - Osterrieder, Tobias
AU - Wortmann, Jonas
AU - Liu, Chao
AU - Weitz, Paul
AU - Heumüller, Thomas
AU - Bornschlegl, Andreas Josef
AU - Wachsmuth, Josua
AU - Distler, Andreas
AU - Wagner, Michael
AU - Peng, Zijian
AU - Lüer, Larry
AU - Brabec, Christoph Joseph
PY - 2025/1
Y1 - 2025/1
N2 - Organic photovoltaics (OPV) now can exceed 20% power conversion efficiency in single junction solar cells. To close the remaining gap to competing technologies, both fill factor and open-circuit voltage must be optimized. The Langevin reduction factor is a well-known concept that measures the degree to which charge extraction is favored over charge recombination. It is therefore ideally suited as an optimization target in high-throughput workflows; however, its evaluation so far requires expert interaction. Here, an integrated high-throughput workflow is presented, able to obtain the Langevin reduction factor within a few seconds with high accuracy without human intervention and thus suited for autonomous experiments. This is achieved by combining evidence from UV–vis spectra, current–voltage curves, and a novel implementation of microsecond transient absorption kinetics allowing, for the first time, the intrinsic determination of charge absorption cross-sections, which is crucial to reporting stationary charge densities. The method is demonstrated by varying the donor:acceptor ratio of the high performance OPV blend PM6:Y12. The high reproducibility of the method allows to find a strictly exponential relationship between the PM6 exciton energy and the Langevin reduction factor.
AB - Organic photovoltaics (OPV) now can exceed 20% power conversion efficiency in single junction solar cells. To close the remaining gap to competing technologies, both fill factor and open-circuit voltage must be optimized. The Langevin reduction factor is a well-known concept that measures the degree to which charge extraction is favored over charge recombination. It is therefore ideally suited as an optimization target in high-throughput workflows; however, its evaluation so far requires expert interaction. Here, an integrated high-throughput workflow is presented, able to obtain the Langevin reduction factor within a few seconds with high accuracy without human intervention and thus suited for autonomous experiments. This is achieved by combining evidence from UV–vis spectra, current–voltage curves, and a novel implementation of microsecond transient absorption kinetics allowing, for the first time, the intrinsic determination of charge absorption cross-sections, which is crucial to reporting stationary charge densities. The method is demonstrated by varying the donor:acceptor ratio of the high performance OPV blend PM6:Y12. The high reproducibility of the method allows to find a strictly exponential relationship between the PM6 exciton energy and the Langevin reduction factor.
KW - Langevin reduction factor
KW - charge dynamics
KW - high throughput
KW - organic photovoltaics
KW - transient absorption kinetics
U2 - 10.1002/aenm.202403479
DO - 10.1002/aenm.202403479
M3 - Journal article
SN - 1614-6832
JO - Advanced Energy Materials
JF - Advanced Energy Materials
ER -