| Literature DB >> 27782112 |
Zhengke Li1, Kui Jiang1,2, Guofang Yang1,3, Joshua Yuk Lin Lai1, Tingxuan Ma1, Jingbo Zhao1, Wei Ma3, He Yan1,2,4.
Abstract
To achieve efficient organic solar cells, the design of suitable donor-acceptor couples is crucially important. State-of-the-art donor polymers used in fullerene cells may not perform well when they are combined with non-fullerene acceptors, thus new donor polymers need to be developed. Here we report non-fullerene organic solar cells with efficiencies up to 10.9%, enabled by a novel donor polymer that exhibits strong temperature-dependent aggregation but with intentionally reduced polymer crystallinity due to the introduction of a less symmetric monomer unit. Our comparative study shows that an analogue polymer with a C2 symmetric monomer unit yields highly crystalline polymer films but less efficient non-fullerene cells. Based on a monomer with a mirror symmetry, our best donor polymer exhibits reduced crystallinity, yet such a polymer matches better with small molecular acceptors. This study provides important insights to the design of donor polymers for non-fullerene organic solar cells.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27782112 PMCID: PMC5095169 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Chemical structures of polymers and SMAs.
Chemical structures of (a) PTFB-P and PTFB-O; (b) ITIC and ITIC-Th. Single crystal structures of (c) T–FB–T-P; (d) T–FB–T-O (F: green, S: yellow).
Photovoltaic properties of solar cells based on polymer:PC71BM and SMA.
| PTFB-P:PC71BM | 0.81±0.01 | 12.9±0.1 | 0.72±0.01 | 7.4±0.2 | 7.59 |
| PTFB-O: PC71BM | 0.83±0.02 | 13.1±0.3 | 0.59±0.01 | 6.4±0.1 | 6.53 |
| PTFB-P:ITIC | 0.92±0.01 | 12.8±0.3 | 0.65±0.02 | 7.6±0.2 | 7.85 |
| PTFB-O:ITIC | 0.92±0.01 | 15.5±0.5 | 0.70±0.02 | 9.9±0.2 | 10.13 |
| PTFB-O:ITIC-Th | 0.92±0.01 | 17.1±0.5 | 0.67±0.02 | 10.5±0.3 | 10.88 |
Voc, Jsc, FF and PCE represent open-circuit voltage, short-circuit current density, fill factor and power-conversion efficiency, respectively.
*The average values are from 30 devices.
Figure 2The solar cell characterization of BHJ devices prepared from polymer:SMA.
(a) Current−voltage plots under illumination with AM 1.5G solar simulated light at 100 mW cm−2. (b) EQE spectra of the BHJ solar cells with SMA.
Figure 3Illustration of alkyl chain orientations in polymers.
(a) PTFB-O, (d) PTFB-P. Blue pane represent direction of alkyl chains. (b) and (c) Illustration of two monomer units with different symmetry (blue circle).
Figure 4Two-dimensional GIWAXS pattern of pure polymer and polymer blend films.
(a) PTFB-O, (b) PTFB-P, (c) PTFB-O:ITIC, (d) PTFB-P:ITIC, (e) PTFB-O:PC71BM and (f) PTFB-P:PC71BM. The colour scales represent the log of diffraction intensity, in the unit of counts.
Coherence length, d spacing and integration of peak intensity for pure polymer, polymer:SMA and polymer:PC71BM films.
| PTFB-O | 115.95 | 24.97 | 37.44 | 3.65 |
| PTFB-P | 177.48 | 22.27 | 175.66 | 3.62 |
| PTFB-O:ITIC | 87.76 | 23.73 | 28.29 | 3.62 |
| PTFB-P:ITIC | 117.90 | 22.61 | 33.90 | 3.62 |
| PTFB-O:PC71BM | 95.59 | 24.54 | 46.44 | 3.62 |
| PTFB-P:PC71BM | 273.29 | 22.58 | 76.89 | 3.59 |