Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-x5gtn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-02T17:10:04.579Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Energy Focus: PV composites with enriched semiconducting SWNTs display prolonged charge separation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 January 2011

Abstract

Type
Other
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2011

Current organic photovoltaic (OPV) solar cells utilize bulk heterojunctions (BHJs) comprised of conjugated polymers acting as electron donors, and derivatized fullerenes acting as electron acceptors. With electron mobility dependent on fullerene clustering and hopping transport, solar power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) now approach 8%. The properties of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) have led to speculation that superior PCEs would result if they were to replace the fullerene phase in OPV solar cells. However, the maximum PCE achieved by SWNT-composite solar cells is only about 0.5%. This low performance has been hypothesized to be due, in part, to the relatively large fraction of metallic (m-) nanotubes in as-produced samples—about one-third, with the remainder semi-conducting (s-) nanotubes—because m-SWNTs lack a true bandgap and can therefore act as recombination centers for charge-carriers or excitons, lowering charge-separation efficiency. One obstacle to a systematic investigation of this hypothesis has been the controllable incorporation of only m-SWNTs or s-SWNTs into photovoltaic blends with semiconducting polymers. Recently, however, J. Blackburn, J. Holt, and a team of researchers at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory produced blends enriched in either m-SWNTs or s-SWNTs dispersed in a semi-conducting polymer matrix, and presented conclusive experimental evidence that charge separation is significantly enhanced as the concentration of m-SWNTs is reduced.

As reported in the November 10, 2010 issue of Nano Letters (DOI: 10.1021/nl102753z; p. 4627), the research team separated m-SWNTs from s-SWNTs with density-gradient ultracentrifugation. Photoabsorption spectroscopy was used to determine the ratios of s- and m-SWNTs in the separated bands. Then, enriched aliquots were combined into large volumes of dispersions with varying ratios of s- and m-SWNTs. Surfactants were removed before the SWNTs were blended with poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT, a prototypical conjugated polymer) to form solutions and films. The researchers used photoluminescence excitation (PLE) spectroscopy to show that P3HT effectively isolates SWNTs primarily as individual SWNTs in dispersions of 90% s-SWNTs and P3HT.

The researchers then used time-resolved microwave conductivity (TRMC), which is sensitive only to mobile carriers and not to charge-neutral excitons, to study the yield, mobility, and decay dynamics of free carriers generated by illumination of composite films with varying fractions of s-SWNTs. They found that the long-lived population of charge carriers increases substantially for samples highly enriched in s-SWNTs in comparison to samples enriched in m-SWNTs.

The researchers concluded that m-SWNTs blended with P3HT are detrimental to PCEs and that eliminating them can significantly improve photocurrents. To summarize, the researchers said that “effectively, what has often been considered as a two-component hybrid system (conjugated polymers and SWNTs) should be treated at a minimum as a three-component system: conjugated polymer, s-SWNTs, and m-SWNTs. Moreover, since every species of SWNT with distinct chiral (n,m) indices expresses unique electronic properties, future work will likely afford valuable insight into specific electronic traits of even more well-defined blends of polymers with chiral-specific s-SWNTs.”