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https://archief.nwo-i.nl/en/news/2012/02/27/more-power-from-plastic-solar-cells/

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March 17th 2025
03:19:57

The physicists hope for a breakthrough: "Our new understanding of the mechanism behind electricity generation in plastic solar cells will contribute to choosing the right materials boosting the efficiency of the next generation of solar cells." 

Mass Production
Conventional solar cells are made of silica. They have been available for some time with the highest efficiency to date of 28 per cent. Plastic solar cells have only just appeared on the market. They are less efficient but they hold important promise for the future: cheap mass production. Rows upon rows of plastic solar cells - as far as the eye can see - could convert the deserts of today into the power stations of tomorrow.  

Charge Transfer
Plastic (also known as 'organic') solar cells convert sunlight into electricity by transferring electrons between two different types of molecules: the donor and the acceptor. Before now, it was not exactly understood how the electron transfer occurs, and which material characteristics determine the efficiency of the process, critical factors in how solar cells function.  

It has been generally assumed that the energy difference between the quantum states of the two types of molecules determined the efficiency of the charge transfer and thus the electricity production. However, the research published in Science demonstrates that despite the importance of this difference, it is not decisive at the end of the day. The decisive mechanism is an extremely short-lived charge-transfer state. Within this state, the positive and negative charges of the various molecules are only very weakly linked to each other. This allows them to be split apart relatively easily and thereby release electricity. 

Partially effective
When an organic solar cell catches sunlight, a part of this light is converted directly into charge carriers via the short-lived state. However, the majority of the captured light is converted into a different electronically excited state, out of which only an inefficient pathway leads to further charge carrier production.  

Using advanced laser technology, the researchers have demonstrated how this inefficient electronically excited state can be converted into an efficient short-lived charge-transfer state through application of short bursts of infrared light. This results in a substantial increase in the number of charge carriers and thus more electricity. 

The University of Groningen researchers are affiliated to the Zernike Institute for Advanced Materials. The first author, Dr Artem Bakulin, currently works at the FOM Institute AMOLF. The research was partially funded with a Rubicon grant from the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) and the Zernike Institute for Advanced Materials.  

More information
Prof.dr. Paul van Loosdrecht +31 (0)50 363 81 49 / 90 38
Dr. Maxim Pchenitchnikov +31 (0)50 363 41 59

Reference
'The Role of Driving Energy and Delocalised States for Charge Separation in Organic Semiconductors', Artem A. Bakulin, Akshay Rao, Vlad G. Pavelyev, Paul H.M. van Loosdrecht, Maxim S. Pshenichnikov, Dorota Niedzialek, Jérôme Cornil, David Beljonne, and  Richard H. Friend. Science (2012). 

The article appeared online on 23 February 2012 as a Science Express paper.

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