Abstract

The side chains of a molecule affect the molecular packing and crystallinity which are crucial factors determining the photovoltaic properties in organic solar cells (OSCs). In this work, two small molecule donors, BDT(X1) and BDT(X2), with identical backbone and slightly different side chains on the end groups have been designed and synthesized. Compared with BDT(X1) with linear alkyl chain, BDT(X2) featuring a branched alkyl chain in the terminal groups has larger steric hindrance and exhibits weaker crystallinity and less compact molecule stacking. Application of the two small molecule donors in OSCs shows that BDT(X1) is more suitable for IDIC, a non-fullerene acceptor, while BDT(X2) demonstrates higher OSC performance when blended with fullerene acceptor PC71BM. Morphology and grazing-incidence wide-angle X-ray scattering (GIWAXS) studies reveal that crystallinity plays a key role in determining the molecular packing and phase separation with fullerene/non-fullerene acceptors which in turn influence the charge transport and photovoltaic properties. Our results provide some guidance on selection of acceptors for a given donor and demonstrate the importance of fine tuning of the crystallinity in small molecule OSCs.

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