Litcius/Paper detail

Geminate and Nongeminate Pathways for Triplet Exciton Formation in Organic Solar Cells

Alberto Privitera, Jeannine Grüne, Akchheta Karki, William K. Myers, Vladimir Dyakonov, Thuc‐Quyen Nguyen, Moritz Riede, Richard H. Friend, Andreas Sperlich, Alexander J. Gillett

2022Advanced Energy Materials41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Organic solar cells (OSCs) have recently shown a rapid improvement in their performance, bringing power conversion efficiencies to above 18%. However, the open‐circuit voltage of OSCs remains low relative to their optical gap and this currently limits efficiency. Recombination to spin‐triplet excitons is a key contributing factor, and is widely, but not universally, observed in donor–acceptor blends using both fullerene and nonfullerenes as electron acceptors. Here, an experimental framework that combines time‐resolved optical and magnetic resonance spectroscopies to detect triplet excitons and identify their formation mechanisms, is reported. The methodology is applied to two well‐studied polymer:fullerene systems, PM6:PC 60 BM and PTB7‐Th:PC 60 BM. In contrast to the more efficient nonfullerene acceptor systems that show only triplet states formed via nongeminate recombination, the fullerene systems also show significant triplet formation via geminate processes. This requires that geminate electron–hole pairs be trapped long enough to allow intersystem crossing. It is proposed that this is a general feature of fullerene acceptor systems, where isolated fullerenes are known to intercalate within the alkyl sidechains of the donor polymers. Thus, the study demonstrates that engineering good donor and acceptor domain purity is key for suppressing losses via triplet excitons in OSCs.

Topics & Concepts

Intersystem crossingFullereneOrganic solar cellExcitonMaterials scienceAcceptorElectron acceptorChemical physicsPhotochemistryPolymer solar cellEnergy conversion efficiencyOptoelectronicsPolymerChemistryAtomic physicsPhysicsExcited stateCondensed matter physicsSinglet stateOrganic chemistryComposite materialOrganic Electronics and PhotovoltaicsConducting polymers and applicationsOrganic Light-Emitting Diodes Research