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91̽»¨
One of the substrate layouts for our organic solar cells
Credit: AFMD Group

Moritz Riede

Professor of Soft Functional Nanomaterials

Research theme

  • Photovoltaics and nanoscience

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • Advanced Functional Materials and Devices (AFMD) Group
moritz.riede@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72377 (office),01865 (2)82095 (lab)
  • About
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Organic Semiconductors ☆

Chapter in Reference Module in Materials Science and Materials Engineering, Elsevier (2018)

Authors:

Moritz Riede, Björn Lüssem, Karl Leo, Abu Zayed Mohammad Saliqur Rahman

MINERVA: A facility to study Microstructure and INterface Evolution in Realtime under VAcuum

Review of Scientific Instruments AIP Publishing 88:10 (2017) 103901

Authors:

C Nicklin, Josue Martinez Hardigree, A Warne, S Green, M Burt, J Naylor, A Dorman, D Wicks, S Din, Moritz K Riede

Abstract:

A sample environment to enable real-time X-ray scattering measurements to be recorded during the growth of materials by thermal evaporation in vacuum is presented. The in-situ capabilities include studying microstructure development with time or during exposure to different environmental conditions, such as temperature and gas pressure. The chamber provides internal slits and a beam stop, to reduce the background scattering from the X-rays passing through the entrance and exit windows, together with highly controllable flux rates of the evaporants. Initial experiments demonstrate some of the possibilities by monitoring the growth of bathophenanthroline (BPhen), a common molecule used in organic solar cells and organic light emitting diodes, including the development of the microstructure with time and depth within the film. The results show how BPhen nanocrystal structures coarsen at room temperature under vacuum, highlighting the importance of using real time measurements to understand the as deposited pristine film structure and its development with time. More generally, this sample environment is versatile and can be used for investigation of structure-property relationships in a wide range of vacuum deposited materials and their applications in, for example, optoelectronic devices and energy storage.

Introduction

Chapter in , Springer Science and Business Media LLC 32:10 (2017) 1797-1797

Authors:

Dean Delongchamp, Chris Nicklin, Moritz Riede

Introduction

Journal of Materials Research Springer Nature 32:10 (2017) 1797-1797

Authors:

Dean Delongchamp, Chris Nicklin, Moritz Riede

Intrinsic non-radiative voltage losses in fullerene-based organic solar cells

Nature Energy Springer Nature 2:6 (2017) 17053

Authors:

Johannes Benduhn, Kristofer Tvingstedt, Fortunato Piersimoni, Sascha Ullbrich, Yeli Fan, Manuel Tropiano, Kathryn A McGarry, Olaf Zeika, Moritz Riede, Christopher J Douglas, Stephen Barlow, Seth R Marder, Dieter Neher, Donato Spoltore, Koen Vandewal

Abstract:

Organic solar cells demonstrate external quantum efficiencies and fill factors approaching those of conventional photovoltaic technologies. However, as compared with the optical gap of the absorber materials, their open-circuit voltage is much lower, largely due to the presence of significant non-radiative recombination. Here, we study a large data set of published and new material combinations and find that non-radiative voltage losses decrease with increasing charge-transfer-state energies. This observation is explained by considering non-radiative charge-transfer-state decay as electron transfer in the Marcus inverted regime, being facilitated by a common skeletal molecular vibrational mode. Our results suggest an intrinsic link between non-radiative voltage losses and electron-vibration coupling, indicating that these losses are unavoidable. Accordingly, the theoretical upper limit for the power conversion efficiency of single-junction organic solar cells would be reduced to about 25.5% and the optimal optical gap increases to 1.45–1.65 eV, that is, 0.2–0.3 eV higher than for technologies with minimized non-radiative voltage losses.

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