Protic ionic liquids as p-dopant for organic hole transporting materials and their application in high efficiency hybrid solar cells.
J Am Chem Soc 135:36 (2013) 13538-13548
Abstract:
Chemical doping is a powerful method to improve the charge transport and to control the conductivity in organic semiconductors (OSs) for a wide range of electronic devices. We demonstrate protic ionic liquids (PILs) as effective p-dopant in both polymeric and small molecule OSs. In particular, we show that PILs promote single electron oxidation, which increases the hole concentration in the semiconducting film. The illustrated PIL-doping mechanism is compatible with materials processed by solution and is stable in air. We report the use of PIL-doping in hybrid solar cells based on triarylamine hole transporting materials, such as 2,2',7,7'-tetrakis(N,N-di-p-methoxyphenyl-amine)9,9'-spirobifluorene (spiro-OMeTAD). We show improved power conversion efficiency by replacing lithium salts, typical p-dopants for spiro-OMeTAD, with PILs. We use photovoltage-photocurrent decay and photoinduced absorption spectroscopy to establish that significantly improved device performance is mainly due to reduced charge transport resistance in the hole-transporting layer, as potentiated by PIL-doping.Color in the Corners: ITO‐Free White OLEDs with Angular Color Stability
Advanced Materials Wiley 25:29 (2013) 4006-4013
White OLEDs: Color in the Corners: ITO‐Free White OLEDs with Angular Color Stability (Adv. Mater. 29/2013)
Advanced Materials Wiley 25:29 (2013) 4060-4060
High-Performance Perovskite-Polymer Hybrid Solar Cells via Electronic Coupling with Fullerene Monolayers
Nano Letters American Chemical Society (ACS) 13:7 (2013) 3124-3128
Charge density dependent mobility of organic hole-transporters and mesoporous TiO₂ determined by transient mobility spectroscopy: implications to dye-sensitized and organic solar cells.
Adv Mater 25:23 (2013) 3227-3233