2011 Annual Meeting
(401d) Self-Assembled Plasmonic Electrodes for High-Performance Organic Photovoltaic Cells
Authors
Sang-Hyun Oh - Presenter, University of Minnesota
Wade A. Luhman - Presenter, University of Minnesota
Si Hoon Lee - Presenter, University of Minnesota
Timothy W. Johnson - Presenter, University of Minnesota
Russell J. Holmes - Presenter, University of Minnesota
Thin Ag films perforated with subwavelength hole arrays are used as transparent conducting electrodes for organic photovoltaic cells. Plasmonic electrodes are fabricated using nanosphere lithography to create hexagonal nanohole arrays. Organic photovoltaic cells constructed using a nanopatterned Ag anode show power conversion efficiencies that exceed those of devices constructed on conventional indium-tin-oxide, independent of light polarization. In comparison to cells constructed on unpatterned Ag, the power conversion efficiency is noted to double with patterning.