Improving solar-cell efficiency

Solar power generation gained some more strength using devices made with polymers.

This solar cell consists of a new polymer, called PID2, which was developed in the laboratory of Luping Yu.
From Andrew Nelles, University of Chicago

 

According to researchers, a new polymer — a type of large molecule that forms plastics and other familiar materials —improved the efficiency of solar cells. The group also determined the method by which the polymer improved the cells’ efficiency. The polymer allowed electrical charges to move more easily throughout the cell, boosting the production of electricity — a mechanism never before demonstrated in such devices.

“Polymer solar cells have great potential to provide low-cost, lightweight and flexible electronic devices to harvest solar energy,” says Luyao Lu, graduate student in chemistry and lead author of a paper describing the result.

The research was a collaboration between scientists in the University of Chicago’s chemistry department, the Institute for Molecular Engineering, and Argonne National Laboratory.

Solar cells made from polymers are a popular topic of research due to their appealing properties. But researchers are still struggling to efficiently generate electrical power with these materials.

“The field is rather immature — it’s in the infancy stage,” says Luping Yu, professor in chemistry, fellow in the Institute for Molecular Engineering, who led the University of Chicago’s chemistry department carrying out the research.

The active regions of such solar cells consist of a mixture of polymers that give and receive electrons to generate electrical current when exposed to light. The new polymer developed by Yu’s group, called PID2 improves the efficiency of electrical power generation by 15% when added to a standard polymer-fullerene mixture.

“Fullerene, a small carbon molecule, is one of the standard materials used in polymer solar cells,” says Lu. “Basically, in polymer solar cells we have a polymer as electron donor and fullerene as electron acceptor to allow charge separation.”

In their work, the UChicago-Argonne researchers added another polymer into the device, resulting in solar cells with two polymers and one fullerene.

The group achieved an efficiency of 8.2% when an optimal amount of PID2 was added — the highest ever for solar cells made up of two types of polymers with fullerene— and the result implies that even higher efficiencies could be possible with further work. The group is now working to push efficiencies toward 10%, a benchmark necessary for polymer solar cells to be viable for commercial application.

Yu (left) watches as Luyao Lu prepares to measure the external quantum efficiency of their newly developed polymer solar cell.
From Andrew Nelles, University of Chicago.

 

The result was remarkable not only because of the advance in technical capabilities, Yu noted, but also because PID2 enhanced the efficiency via a new method. The standard mechanism for improving efficiency with a third polymer is by increasing the absorption of light in the device. But in addition to that effect, the team found when they added PID2, charges transported more easily between polymers and throughout the cell.

In order for a current to end up generated by the solar cell, electrons must transfer from polymer to fullerene within the device. But the difference between electron energy levels for the standard polymer-fullerene is large enough that electron transfer between them is difficult. PID2 has energy levels in between the other two, and acts as an intermediary in the process.

“It’s like a step,” says Yu. “When it’s too high, it’s hard to climb up, but if you put in the middle another step then you can easily walk up.”

With the collaboration with Argonne, Yu and his group were also able to study the changes in structure of the polymer blend when PID2 added in, and show that these changes likewise improved the ability of charges to move throughout the cell, further improving the efficiency. The addition of PID2 caused the polymer blend to form fibers, which improve the mobility of electrons throughout the material. The fibers serve as a pathway to allow electrons to travel to the electrodes on the sides of the solar cell.

“It’s like you’re generating a street and somebody that’s traveling along the street can find a way to go from this end to another,” says Yu.

To reveal this structure, Wei Chen of the Materials Science Division at Argonne National Laboratory and the Institute for Molecular Engineering performed X-ray scattering studies using the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne and the Advanced Light Source at Lawrence Berkeley.

“Without that it’s hard to get insight about the structure,” says Yu, calling the collaboration with Argonne “crucial” to the work. “That benefits us tremendously,” he said.

“Working together, these groups represent a confluence of the best materials and the best expertise and tools to study them to achieve progress beyond what could be achieved with independent efforts,” says Chen.

“This knowledge will serve as a foundation from which to develop high-efficiency organic photovoltaic devices to meet the nation’s future energy needs,” says Chen.

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