Literature DB >> 33071704

Influence of Polymer Aggregation and Liquid Immiscibility on Morphology Tuning by Varying Composition in PffBT4T-2DT/Non-Fullerene Organic Solar Cells.

Zeinab Hamid1, Andrew Wadsworth1, Elham Rezasoltani2, Sarah Holliday1, Mohammed Azzouzi2, Marios Neophytou3, Anne A Y Guilbert2, Yifan Dong1, Mark S Little1, Subhrangsu Mukherjee4, Andrew A Herzing4, Helen Bristow1, R Joseph Kline4, Dean M DeLongchamp4, Artem A Bakulin1, James Durrant1, Jenny Nelson2, Iain McCulloch5.   

Abstract

The temperature dependent aggregation behavior of PffBT4T polymers used in organic solar cells plays a critical role in the formation of a favorable morphology in fullerene-based devices. However, there has been little investigation into the impact of donor/acceptor ratio on morphology tuning, especially for non-fullerene acceptors (NFAs). Herein, the influence of composition on morphology is reported for blends of PffBT4T-2DT with two NFAs, O-IDTBR and O-IDFBR. The monotectic phase behavior inferred from differential scanning calorimetry provides qualitative insight into the interplay between solid-liquid and liquid-liquid demixing. Transient absorption spectroscopy suggests that geminate recombination dominates charge decay and that the decay rate is insensitive to composition, corroborated by negligible changes in open-circuit voltage. Exciton lifetimes are also insensitive to composition, which is attributed to the signal being dominated by acceptor excitons which are formed and decay in domains of similar size and purity irrespective of composition. A hierarchical morphology is observed, where the composition dependence of size scales and scattering intensity from resonant soft X-ray scattering (R-SoXS) is dominated by variations in volume fractions of polymer/polymer rich domains. Results suggest an optimal morphology where polymer crystallite size and connectivity are balanced, ensuring a high probability of hole extraction via such domains.

Entities:  

Keywords:  calorimetry; morphology; nonfullerene; organic photovoltaics; phase behavior

Year:  2020        PMID: 33071704      PMCID: PMC7560964     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Energy Mater        ISSN: 1614-6832            Impact factor:   29.368


  25 in total

1.  A Wide Band Gap Polymer with a Deep Highest Occupied Molecular Orbital Level Enables 14.2% Efficiency in Polymer Solar Cells.

Authors:  Sunsun Li; Long Ye; Wenchao Zhao; Hongping Yan; Bei Yang; Delong Liu; Wanning Li; Harald Ade; Jianhui Hou
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2018-05-21       Impact factor: 15.419

2.  Role of crystal-amorphous interaction in phase equilibria of crystal-amorphous polymer blends.

Authors:  Rushikesh A Matkar; Thein Kyu
Journal:  J Phys Chem B       Date:  2006-06-29       Impact factor: 2.991

3.  Effect of multiple adduct fullerenes on microstructure and phase behavior of P3HT:fullerene blend films for organic solar cells.

Authors:  Anne A Y Guilbert; Luke X Reynolds; Annalisa Bruno; Andrew MacLachlan; Simon P King; Mark A Faist; Ellis Pires; J Emyr Macdonald; Natalie Stingelin; Saif A Haque; Jenny Nelson
Journal:  ACS Nano       Date:  2012-05-03       Impact factor: 15.881

4.  The binding energy and dynamics of charge-transfer states in organic photovoltaics with low driving force for charge separation.

Authors:  Yifan Dong; Hyojung Cha; Jiangbin Zhang; Ernest Pastor; Pabitra Shakya Tuladhar; Iain McCulloch; James R Durrant; Artem A Bakulin
Journal:  J Chem Phys       Date:  2019-03-14       Impact factor: 3.488

5.  An Efficient, "Burn in" Free Organic Solar Cell Employing a Nonfullerene Electron Acceptor.

Authors:  Hyojung Cha; Jiaying Wu; Andrew Wadsworth; Jade Nagitta; Saurav Limbu; Sebastian Pont; Zhe Li; Justin Searle; Mark F Wyatt; Derya Baran; Ji-Seon Kim; Iain McCulloch; James R Durrant
Journal:  Adv Mater       Date:  2017-06-28       Impact factor: 30.849

6.  Design of Donor Polymers with Strong Temperature-Dependent Aggregation Property for Efficient Organic Photovoltaics.

Authors:  Huawei Hu; Philip C Y Chow; Guangye Zhang; Tingxuan Ma; Jing Liu; Guofang Yang; He Yan
Journal:  Acc Chem Res       Date:  2017-09-15       Impact factor: 22.384

7.  Diffusion-Limited Crystallization: A Rationale for the Thermal Stability of Non-Fullerene Solar Cells.

Authors:  Liyang Yu; Deping Qian; Sara Marina; Ferry A A Nugroho; Anirudh Sharma; Sandra Hultmark; Anna I Hofmann; Renee Kroon; Johannes Benduhn; Detlef-M Smilgies; Koen Vandewal; Mats R Andersson; Christoph Langhammer; Jaime Martín; Feng Gao; Christian Müller
Journal:  ACS Appl Mater Interfaces       Date:  2019-06-07       Impact factor: 9.229

8.  Reducing the efficiency-stability-cost gap of organic photovoltaics with highly efficient and stable small molecule acceptor ternary solar cells.

Authors:  Derya Baran; Raja Shahid Ashraf; David A Hanifi; Maged Abdelsamie; Nicola Gasparini; Jason A Röhr; Sarah Holliday; Andrew Wadsworth; Sarah Lockett; Marios Neophytou; Christopher J M Emmott; Jenny Nelson; Christoph J Brabec; Aram Amassian; Alberto Salleo; Thomas Kirchartz; James R Durrant; Iain McCulloch
Journal:  Nat Mater       Date:  2016-11-21       Impact factor: 43.841

9.  A rhodanine flanked nonfullerene acceptor for solution-processed organic photovoltaics.

Authors:  Sarah Holliday; Raja Shahid Ashraf; Christian B Nielsen; Mindaugas Kirkus; Jason A Röhr; Ching-Hong Tan; Elisa Collado-Fregoso; Astrid-Caroline Knall; James R Durrant; Jenny Nelson; Iain McCulloch
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2015-01-12       Impact factor: 15.419

10.  Aggregation and morphology control enables multiple cases of high-efficiency polymer solar cells.

Authors:  Yuhang Liu; Jingbo Zhao; Zhengke Li; Cheng Mu; Wei Ma; Huawei Hu; Kui Jiang; Haoran Lin; Harald Ade; He Yan
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2014-11-10       Impact factor: 14.919

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