Study on performance degradation of organic solar cell based on P3HT–PCBM
                
                        
                        HENG MA1,2,*
                            ,
                        
                        CHUANKUN WANG1,2,
                        
                        YUFENG ZHANG1,2,
                        
                        CHENXI LI1,
                        
                        GUANGHUA JING1,
                        
                        YURONG JIANG1,2
                        
                    
                    Affiliation
                    
                        
                        - Department of Physics, Henan Normal University, Xinxiang, 453007, China
 
                        
                        - Henan Key Laboratory of Photovoltaic Materials, Xinxiang, 453007, China
 
                        
                    
                     
        
        Abstract
        The current study reports the performance degradation of the short-circuit current density, open-circuit voltage, fill factor, and conversion efficiency of organic solar cells made of poly(3-hexylthiophene) and [6,6]-phenyl C61 butyric acid methyl ester. These parameters, which are functions of time, were measured as functions of perdurability at low room temperature (below 10 °C). The short-circuit current density and open-circuit voltage were found to decrease along an approximate exponential decay as a function of total time. The fill factor of the cells increased in a zigzag manner. The result of the conversion efficiency showed a rapid index decrease..
        Keywords
        Short-circuit current density, Open-circuit voltage, Fill factor, Conversion efficiency.
        Citation
        HENG MA, CHUANKUN WANG, YUFENG ZHANG, CHENXI LI, GUANGHUA JING, YURONG JIANG, Study on performance degradation of organic solar cell based on P3HT–PCBM, Optoelectronics and Advanced Materials - Rapid Communications, 6, 1-2, January-February 2012, pp.78-81 (2012).
        Submitted at: Dec. 6, 2011
 
        Accepted at: Feb. 20, 2012