Volume 6, Issue 9 1502230
Full Paper

Temperature Dependence of Ideality Factors in Organic Solar Cells and the Relation to Radiative Efficiency

Kristofer Tvingstedt,

Corresponding Author

Experimental Physics VI, Julius-Maximillian University of Würzburg, 97074 Würzburg, Germany

Institut für Physik, Technische Universität Chemnitz, 09126 Chemnitz, Germany

E-mail: ktvingstedt@uni-wuerzburg.deSearch for more papers by this author
Carsten Deibel,

Institut für Physik, Technische Universität Chemnitz, 09126 Chemnitz, Germany

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 16 February 2016
Citations: 68

Abstract

The value and temperature dependence of the ideality factor provides essential information about the dominant recombination route in solar cells. This study presents experimental results of accurate ideality factor determination for representative organic photovoltaic cells (OPV) evaluated at different temperatures over a large current density regime. It is noted that standard dark IV curves strongly deviate from those obtained by evaluations based on short circuit current density (J SC)–open circuit voltage (V OC) pairs. This is attributed to the applied external voltage in a dark IV measurement not being representative of internal chemical potential, particularly at lower temperatures. Complementary electroluminescence measurements attest that the current density dependence of the ability of the solar cell to emit light is better correlated to the series resistance free ideality factor. For the studied set of OPV devices it is observed that the ideality factors are quite low, and with very weak temperature dependence. The J SCV OC method to determine ideality factors further allows good estimates of activation energies as well as recombination current prefactors J 00. The findings imply that the principal OPV non-radiative recombination mechanism is not recombination of free carriers with trapped carriers in an exponential density of tail states as previously reported.

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