| Literature DB >> 31185565 |
Liyang Yu1, Deping Qian2, Sara Marina3, Ferry A A Nugroho, Anirudh Sharma4,5, Sandra Hultmark, Anna I Hofmann, Renee Kroon, Johannes Benduhn6, Detlef-M Smilgies7, Koen Vandewal8, Mats R Andersson4, Christoph Langhammer, Jaime Martín3,9, Feng Gao2, Christian Müller.
Abstract
Organic solar cells are thought to suffer from poor thermal stability of the active layer nanostructure, a common belief that is based on the extensive work that has been carried out on fullerene-based systems. We show that a widely studied non-fullerene acceptor, the indacenodithienothiophene-based acceptor ITIC, crystallizes in a profoundly different way as compared to fullerenes. Although fullerenes are frozen below the glass-transition temperature Tg of the photovoltaic blend, ITIC can undergo a glass-crystal transition considerably below its high Tg of ∼180 °C. Nanoscopic crystallites of a low-temperature polymorph are able to form through a diffusion-limited crystallization process. The resulting fine-grained nanostructure does not evolve further with time and hence is characterized by a high degree of thermal stability. Instead, above Tg, the low temperature polymorph melts, and micrometer-sized crystals of a high-temperature polymorph develop, enabled by more rapid diffusion and hence long-range mass transport. This leads to the same detrimental decrease in photovoltaic performance that is known to occur also in the case of fullerene-based blends. Besides explaining the superior thermal stability of non-fullerene blends at relatively high temperatures, our work introduces a new rationale for the design of bulk heterojunctions that is not based on the selection of high- Tg materials per se but diffusion-limited crystallization. The planar structure of ITIC and potentially other non-fullerene acceptors readily facilitates the desired glass-crystal transition, which constitutes a significant advantage over fullerenes, and may pave the way for truly stable organic solar cells.Entities:
Keywords: diffusion-limited crystallization; glass-transition temperature; non-fullerene acceptor; organic solar cell; thermally stable photovoltaics
Year: 2019 PMID: 31185565 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b04554
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229