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Efficient hybrid colloidal quantum dot/organic solar cells mediated by near-infrared sensitizing small molecules

Authors
Baek, Se-WoongJun, SunhongKim, ByeongsuProppe, Andrew H.Ouellette, OlivierVoznyy, OleksandrKim, ChangjoKim, JunhoWalters, Grant)Song, Jung HoonJeong, SoheeByun, Hye RyungJeong, Mun SeokHoogland, Sjoerdde Arquer, F. Pelayo GarciaKelley, Shana O.Lee, Jung-Yong)Sargent, Edward H.
Issue Date
Nov-2019
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Citation
Nature Energy, v.4, no.11, pp.969 - 976
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Nature Energy
Volume
4
Number
11
Start Page
969
End Page
976
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/146791
DOI
10.1038/s41560-019-0492-1
ISSN
2058-7546
Abstract
Solution-processed semiconductors are promising materials to realize optoelectronic devices that combine high performance with inexpensive manufacturing. In particular, the exploitation of colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) capable of harvesting infrared photons, in conjunction with visible-absorbing organic chromophores, has been demonstrated as an interesting route. Unfortunately, CQD/organic hybrid photovoltaics have been limited to power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) below 10% due to chemical mismatch and difficulties in facilitating charge collection. Here we devise a hybrid architecture that overcomes these limitations by introducing small molecules into the CQD/organic stacked structure. The small molecule complements CQD absorption and creates an exciton cascade with the host polymer, thus enabling efficient energy transfer and also promoting exciton dissociation at heterointerfaces. The resulting hybrid solar cells exhibit PCEs of 13.1% and retain over 80% of their initial PCE after 150 h of continuous operation unencapsulated, outperforming present air-processed solution-cast CQD/organic photovoltaics.
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