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Dilute Donor Organic Solar Cells Based on Non-fullerene Acceptors

Shaun McAnally, Hui Jin, Ronan Chu, Neil Mallo, Xiao Wang, Paul L. Burn, I. Gentle, Paul E. Shaw

2024ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces15 citationsDOI

Abstract

The advent of small molecule non-fullerene acceptor (NFA) materials for organic photovoltaic (OPV) devices has led to a series of breakthroughs in performance and device lifetime. The most efficient OPV devices have a combination of electron donor and acceptor materials that constitute the light absorbing layer in a bulk heterojunction (BHJ) structure. For many BHJ-based devices reported to date, the weight ratio of donor to acceptor is near equal. However, the morphology of such films can be difficult to reproduce and manufacture at scale. There would be an advantage in developing a light harvesting layer for efficient OPV devices that contains only a small amount of either the donor or acceptor. In this work we explore low donor content OPV devices composed of the polymeric donor PM6 blended with high performance NFA materials, Y6 or ITIC-4F . We found that even when the donor:acceptor weight ratio was only 1:10, the OPV devices still have good photoconversion efficiencies of around 6% and 5% for Y6 and ITIC-4F, respectively. It was found that neither charge mobility nor recombination rates had a strong effect on the efficiency of the devices. Rather, the overall efficiency was strongly related to the film absorption coefficient and maintaining adequate interfacial surface area between donor and acceptor molecules/phases for efficient exciton dissociation.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceFullereneOrganic solar cellNanotechnologyPhotochemistryOrganic chemistryComposite materialChemistryPolymerOrganic Electronics and PhotovoltaicsConducting polymers and applicationsPerovskite Materials and Applications