1. Organic photovoltaics.
- Author
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Demming, Anna, Krebs, Frederik C, and Chen, Hongzheng
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PHOTOVOLTAIC power generation , *RENEWABLE energy sources , *ENERGY consumption , *ENERGY shortages , *SOLAR cell efficiency , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
Energy inflation, the constant encouragement to economize on energy consumption and the huge investments in developing alternative energy resources might seem to suggest that there is a global shortage of energy. Far from it, the energy the Sun beams on the Earth each hour is equivalent to a year’s supply, even at our increasingly ravenous rate of global energy consumption [1]. But it’s not what you have got it’s what you do with it. Hence the intense focus on photovoltaic research to find more efficient ways to harness energy from the Sun. Recently much of this research has centred on organic solar cells since they offer simple, low-cost, light-weight and large-area flexible photovoltaic structures. This issue with guest editors Frederik C Krebs and Hongzheng Chen focuses on some of the developments at the frontier of organic photovoltaic technology. Improving the power conversion efficiency of organic photovoltaic systems, while maintaining the inherent material, economic and fabrication benefits, has absorbed a great deal of research attention in recent years. Here significant progress has been made with reports now of organic photovoltaic devices with efficiencies of around 10%. Yet operating effectively across the electromagnetic spectrum remains a challenge. ‘The trend is towards engineering low bandgap polymers with a wide optical absorption range and efficient hole/electron transport materials, so that light harvesting in the red and infrared region is enhanced and as much light of the solar spectrum as possible can be converted into an electrical current’, explains Mukundan Thelakkat and colleagues in Germany, the US and UK. In this special issue they report on how charge carrier mobility and morphology of the active blend layer in thin film organic solar cells correlate with device parameters [2]. The work contributes to a better understanding of the solar-cell characteristics of polymer:fullerene blends, which form the material basis for some of the most successful solution processable organic photovoltaic devices at present. Andrey E Rudenko, Sangtaik Noh, and Barry C Thompson at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, combine two approaches to broaden the absorption of conjugated polymers [3]. In atomistic bandgap control, a heavier chalcogen heteroatom is introduced into the aromatic repeat unit to decrease the HOMO–LUMO gap. In the semi-random donor–acceptor polymer architecture, small amounts of electron deficient monomers are incorporated at random. ‘We have successfully established the concept of extending photon absorption through the combination of atomistic bandgap control and the donor–acceptor-based semi-random platform using a family of three new semi-random selenophene-based polymers’, explain Thompson and colleagues. They add that the polymers exhibit extended and enhanced photon absorption compared with their polythiophene analogues while maintaining semicrystallinity. The benefits of various fabrication treatments are also reported, such as methanol rinsing for modifying the active layer interface [4] and annealing to achieve bicontinuous nanoscale phase separation for efficient exciton dissociation and charge collection [5]. The issue highlights how successfully structure and morphology can be manipulated to optimize solar-cell efficiencies while retaining advantageous material properties, with reports of innovative studies of bulk heterojunction [6–9] and inverse [10–13] structures, as well as innovative replacements for the traditional ITO transparent conducting electrode [14, 15]. Thomas Edison is famously quoted as saying ‘I’d put my money on the Sun and solar energy, what a source of power! I hope we don’t have to wait until oil and coal run out, before we tackle that’. Born in the wake of the industrial revolution when coal was king, the words seem strangely anachronistic and ahead of h [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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