화학공학소재연구정보센터
Thin Solid Films, Vol.623, 72-83, 2017
Ultraviolet-ozone anode surface treatment and its effect on organic solar cells
The effect of ultraviolet (UV)-ozone-treated indium-tin oxide (ITO, anode) on the initial parameters and degradation in small-molecule organic solar cells (OSCs) with the structure of ITO/copper phthalocyanine (CuPc, donor)/fullerene (acceptor)/bathocuproine (cathode buffer)/Ag (cathode) was experimentally investigated. A UV-ozone exposure with a DV intensity of 13.5 mW/cm(2) on the ITO surface was examined. The results indicated that compared with OSCs with no DV exposure, the initial short-circuit current density and power-conversion efficiency eta(p) increased in the OSC by 20% and 13%, respectively, after 1 min of UV-ozone exposure. A repeated illumination stress comprising 3 s of illumination and 12 s of darkness was imposed on OSCs in air. The UV-ozone treated OSCs showed excellent durability under the repeated illumination stress. After 10 min of UV-ozone exposure, the OSCs exhibited only an 8% decrease in eta(p) after 100 illumination cycles. However, with no DV exposure, Tip decreased by approximately 65%, and the OSC5 developed strong S-shaped kinks in their current-voltage characteristics, suggesting an increase in series resistance at the ITO-CuPc interface. The UV-ozone treatment much reduces the carbon contaminants on the ITO surface and increases the clean surface with polar components of OH functional groups and negatively charged oxygen. This generates attractive force between ITO and CuPc film. The attractive force prevents further CuPc crystal disorder and void formation at the ITO/CuPc interface, and achieves the durability against the illumination stress. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.