Nanodiamonds as Charge Extraction Layer in Organic Solar Cells: The Impact of the Nanodiamond Surface Chemistry

GND
1278619623
ORCID
0000-0001-7740-380X
Affiliation
Laboratory of Organic and Macromolecular Chemistry (IOMC) Friedrich Schiller University Jena 07743 Jena Germany
Sokeng Djoumessi, Aurelien;
GND
1323121439
Affiliation
Laboratory of Organic and Macromolecular Chemistry (IOMC) Friedrich Schiller University Jena 07743 Jena Germany
Sichwardt, Anastasia;
Affiliation
Institute of Physics Czech Academy of Sciences 162 00 Prague 6 Czech Republic
Miliaieva, Daria;
Affiliation
Institute of Physics Czech Academy of Sciences 162 00 Prague 6 Czech Republic
Čermák, Jan;
GND
1309889961
Affiliation
Institute of Solid State Physics Friedrich Schiller University Jena 07743 Jena Germany
Schaal, Maximilian;
GND
1216348588
Affiliation
Institute of Solid State Physics Friedrich Schiller University Jena 07743 Jena Germany
Otto, Felix;
Affiliation
Institute of Physics Czech Academy of Sciences 162 00 Prague 6 Czech Republic
Stehlík, Štěpán;
Affiliation
Faculty of Electrical Engineering Czech Technical University in Prague 166 27 Prague Czech Republic
Kuliček, Jaroslav;
Affiliation
Institute of Physics Slovak Academy of Sciences 845 11 Bratislava Slovak Republic
Nádaždy, Vojtech;
GND
1201693934
Affiliation
Institute of Solid State Physics Friedrich Schiller University Jena 07743 Jena Germany
Fritz, Torsten;
Affiliation
Institute of Physics Czech Academy of Sciences 162 00 Prague 6 Czech Republic
Kromka, Alexander;
Affiliation
Faculty of Electrical Engineering Czech Technical University in Prague 166 27 Prague Czech Republic
Rezek, Bohuslav;
GND
113792077
Affiliation
Laboratory of Organic and Macromolecular Chemistry (IOMC) Friedrich Schiller University Jena 07743 Jena Germany
Schubert, Ulrich S.;
GND
1189759497
Affiliation
Laboratory of Organic and Macromolecular Chemistry (IOMC) Friedrich Schiller University Jena 07743 Jena Germany
Hoppe, Harald

Diamond nanoparticles so‐called nanodiamonds (NDs) have recently experienced raising scientific interest due to interesting optical and electronic properties, nontoxicity, biocompatibility, and large surface area. Another significant feature of NDs is the versatility of the surface chemistry, where various functional groups can be attached. This provides an excellent platform for adjusting NDs properties and functions for many applications including in photovoltaic devices. Herein, high‐pressure high‐temperature (HPHT) NDs are tested as charge extraction material in organic solar cells using various surface chemistries: as‐received (HPHT ND‐ar), oxidized (HPHT ND‐O), and hydrogenated (HPHT ND‐O‐H) NDs. Despite the high work function values (≈5.3 eV) of HPHT ND‐ar and HPHT ND‐O, which make these materials normally suitable for hole extraction, devices made with them failed. In contrast, the work function decreases upon hydrogenation (≈4.5 eV) of the beforehand oxidized NDs, making them interesting for electron extraction. By employing such HPHT ND‐O‐H for electron extraction layers, PBDB‐T:ITIC‐based devices reach 77%, while PM6:Y6‐based devices reach even 85% of the performance when process on standard ZnO electron transport layers. Improvement of the film‐forming qualities of this new electron extraction material is expected to further improve the performance.

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