Water-based layer-by-layer processing enables 19% efficient binary organic solar cells with minimized thickness sensitivity

  • Chen Xie
  • , Xianghui Zeng
  • , Chengsheng Li
  • , Xiaokang Sun
  • , Songqiang Liang
  • , Hui Huang
  • , Baoshen Deng
  • , Xuanlin Wen
  • , Guangye Zhang
  • , Peng You
  • , Chuqun Yang
  • , Yulai Han
  • , Shunpu Li
  • , Guanghao Lu
  • , Hanlin Hu
  • , Ning Li
  • , Yiwang Chen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

48 Scopus citations

Abstract

Water processing is an ideal strategy for the eco-friendly fabrication of organic solar cells (OSCs), exhibiting a strong market-driven need. Herein, we developed a sequential layer-by-layer (LBL) processing for OSCs using a water-based nanoparticle (NP) ink containing a donor to construct a mesostructured NP layer for infiltration with an acceptor. The NP synthesis and deposition process induced a mesostructured NP (mn)-layer with high molecular packing. The subsequent thermal treatment coalesced the mn-layer and resulted in an optimized vertical phase separation. Due to the efficient carrier transport, binary PM6:BTP-eC9 solar cells fabricated by the water-borne mn-LBL technique achieved an efficiency exceeding 19.0% with long-term stability and accessible upscaling property, which were superior to their counterparts obtained from halogenated solvent processing. Additionally, after fine-tuning the vertical morphology through the mn-LBL strategy, the efficiencies of the thickened device (18.2% for 250 nm and 17.2% for 400 nm) surpassed all the reported binary OSCs with high thicknesses. Furthermore, the tunable mesoporosity allowed solvent- and material-independent processing to be achieved regardless of the acceptor solution's infiltrability into the donor film. This elegant approach showcases the potential of molecularly designing “green” solvent-compatible acceptors in conjunction with the mn-LBL strategy to enable the effective lab-to-fab translation of OSCs.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2441-2452
Number of pages12
JournalEnergy and Environmental Science
Volume17
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Feb 2024

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