Efficient Hole Transfer from a Twisted Perylenediimide Acceptor to a Conjugated Polymer in Organic Bulk-Heterojunction Solar Cells

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Non-fullerene acceptors have recently attracted tremendous interest due to their potential as alternatives to fullerene derivatives in bulk-heterojunction solar cells. Nevertheless, physical understanding of charge carrier generation and transfer mechanism that occurred at the interface between the non-fullerene molecule and donor polymer is still behind their enhanced photovoltaic performance. Here we report examples of a non-planar perylene dimer (TP) as an electron acceptor and achieve a power conversion efficiency of 6.29% in a fullerene-free solar cell. Photoluminescence (PL) measurements show high quenching efficiency driven by the excitons of both conjugated polymer and TP molecule, respectively, indicating efficient electron and hole transfer, which can support a highly intermixed phase of blends measured by atomic force microscopy (AFM) and grazing incident wide-angle X-ray diffraction (GIWAXS). Femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy (fs-TAS) reveals that the fast exciton dissociation process from TP molecule to donor polymer contributes to additionally increasing current density, leading to stronger incident photon to current efficiency in the visible region.

Original languageEnglish
Article number737
JournalMaterials
Volume16
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2023

Keywords

  • hole transfer
  • non-fullerene acceptor
  • organic solar cells
  • perylenediimide
  • transient absorption spectroscopy

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