Organic Photovoltaics
Materials, Device Physics, and Manufacturing Technologies

1. Edition June 2008
XXII, 575 Pages, Hardcover
298 Pictures (51 Colored Figures)
36 tables
Handbook/Reference Book
Short Description
Providing complementary views from academia and technology companies, this book covers the three important aspects of materials, device physics, and manufacturing technologies, as well as offering an insight into commercialization concerns. With an introduction by Alan Heeger.
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Providing complementary viewpoints from academia as well as technology companies, this book covers the three most important aspects of successful device design: materials, device physics, and manufacturing technologies. It also offers an insight into commercialization concerns, such as packaging technologies, system integration, reel-to-reel large scale manufacturing issues and production costs. With an introduction by Nobel Laureate Alan Heeger.
I. MATERIALS FOR THIN FILM ORGANIC PV
Donors
- Polythiophenes and their PV Properties
- Polyfluorenes and Fluorene-based Copolymers and their PV Properties
- Low Bandgap Systems for Organic PV
- Small Molecules for Organic PV
Acceptors
- Fullerenes
- Polymeric Acceptors
Solution Processable Nanoparticles and Sol Gel Materials
- The Chemistry of Sol Gel ITO, TiOx, ZnOx as Photovoltaic Components
- Inorganic Nanoparticles for Hybrid Solar Cells
Transport Layers
- PEDOT
- PANI
II. DEVICE PHYSICS OF THIN FILM ORGANIC PV
Bulk Heterojunction Solar Cells
- Overview of the State of the Art of Organic Solar Cells
- Overview on the Photophysics of Organic Solar Cells
- Device Physics of Organic Solar Cells
- Transport Phenomena in Bulk Heterojunction Solar Cells
- Morphology of Bulk Heterojunction Solar Cells
Hybrid Solar Cells
- TiOx Template / Polymer Solar Cells
- TiOx and ZnO Bulk Heterojunction Solar Cells
Small Molecule Multilayer Solar Cells
- TiOx
III. TECHNOLOGY FOR THIN FILM ORGANIC PV
Electrodes for Thin Film PV
- High Performance Electrodes
- R2R Processing of Highly Conductive Metal Oxides
- Novel Electrode Structures for Thin Film PV
Packaging of Thin Film PV
- Flexible Substrates Requirements for Organic Photovoltaics
- Barrier Films for Photovoltaic Applications)
Production of Thin Film PV
- R2R Processing of Thin Film Organic Semiconductors
- Costs, components and System Integration of Organic Photovoltaics
New Concepts and Outlook
- Limitations of Solid State Photovoltaics
Vladimir Dyakonov is full professor of experimental physics at the University of Würzburg, Germany, and scientific director of the Bavarian Centre of Applied Energy Research (ZAE Bayern) in Würzburg. He obtained his diploma degree in physics from the University of Saint Petersburg, his Ph.D. from the A. F. Ioffe-Institute in Russia and his habilitation degree from the University of Oldenburg, Germany in 1986, 1996 and 2001, respectively. From 1996 to 1998, he worked as post-doctoral fellow at the universities of Antwerp, Belgium, and Linz, Austria.
Ullrich Scherf is full professor for Macromolecular Chemistry at Bergische Universität Wuppertal, Germany. He studied chemistry at Friedrich Schiller University of Jena, Germany, obtaining his Ph.D. in 1988 and subsequently spent one year at the Institute for Animal Physiology of the Saxonian Academy of Sciences in Leipzig. He joined the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research in Mainz in 1990 and completed his habilitation in 1996 on polyarylene-type ladder polymers. He followed a call to the University of Potsdam, Germany, onto a professorship for polymer chemistry. He has published over 350 refereed papers and received the Meyer-Struckmann Research Award in 1998.