Abstract
ConspectusThe active layer in a solution processed organic photovoltaic device comprises a light absorbing electron donor semiconductor, typically a polymer, and an electron accepting fullerene acceptor. Although there has been huge effort targeted to optimize the absorbing, energetic, and transport properties of the donor material, fullerenes remain as the exclusive electron acceptor in all high performance devices. Very recently, some new non-fullerene acceptors have been demonstrated to outperform fullerenes in comparative devices. This Account describes this progress, discussing molecular design considerations and the structure–property relationships that are emerging.The motivation to replace fullerene acceptors stems from their synthetic inflexibility, leading to constraints in manipulating frontier energy levels, as well as poor absorption in the solar spectrum range, and an inherent tendency to undergo postfabrication crystallization, resulting in device instability. New acceptors have to address these limitations, providing tunable absorption with high extinction coefficients, thus contributing to device photocurrent. The ability to vary and optimize the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) energy level for a specific donor polymer is also an important requirement, ensuring minimal energy loss on electron transfer and as high an internal voltage as possible. Initially perylene diimide acceptors were evaluated as promising acceptor materials. These electron deficient aromatic molecules can exhibit good electron transport, facilitated by close packed herringbone crystal motifs, and their energy levels can be synthetically tuned. The principal drawback of this class of materials, their tendency to crystallize on too large a length scale for an optimal heterojunction nanostructure, has been shown to be overcome through introduction of conformation twisting through steric effects. This has been primarily achieved by coupling two units together, forming dimers with a large intramolecular twist, which suppresses both nucleation and crystal growth. The generic design concept of rotationally symmetrical aromatic small molecules with extended π orbital delocalization, including polyaromatic hydrocarbons, phthalocyanines, etc., has also provided some excellent small molecule acceptors. In most cases, additional electron withdrawing functionality, such as imide or ester groups, can be incorporated to stabilize the LUMO and improve properties. New calamitic acceptors have been developed, where molecular orbital hybridization of electron rich and poor segments can be judiciously employed to precisely control energy levels. Conformation and intermolecular associations can be controlled by peripheral functionalization leading to optimization of crystallization length scales. In particular, the use of rhodanine end groups, coupled electronically through short bridged aromatic chains, has been a successful strategy, with promising device efficiencies attributed to high lying LUMO energy levels and subsequently large open circuit voltages.
Highlights
In the field of organic photovoltaics (OPV), there is a growing interest in developing new electron acceptor materials in addition to the prevalent fullerene-based acceptors such as phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PC61BM) and phenylC71-butyric acid methyl ester (PC71BM). These fullerene acceptors were derived from the parent C60 and C70 fullerenes to improve the solubility and processability, in particular for bulk heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells. Their dominance in the OPV research landscape stems from advantageous properties including (i) the ability to accept and transport electrons in three dimensions thanks to a lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) that is delocalized over the whole surface of the molecule, (ii) high electron mobilities, (iii) multiple reversible electrochemical reductions, and (iv) the ability to aggregate in bulk heterojunctions to form both pure and mixed domains of the appropriate length scale for charge separation
It is clear that the research into non-fullerene acceptors for organic photovoltaics have progressed rapidly over recent years
Evaporated planar heterojunction devices have reached power conversion efficiencies of 8.4%,33 while bulk heterojunction devices fabricated by solution processing have afforded power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 6.8%
Summary
In the field of organic photovoltaics (OPV), there is a growing interest in developing new electron acceptor materials in addition to the prevalent fullerene-based acceptors such as phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PC61BM) and phenylC71-butyric acid methyl ester (PC71BM). One strategy to disrupt the cofacial stacking in these molecules was the design of a PDI dimer (1.1, Figure 2) using hydrazine as a linker in the imide position, allowing twisting of the dimer and suppression of crystallinity.[5] An average domain size of about 10 nm was observed for the blend of PBDTTT-C-T/1.1a (1:1), which resulted in a PCE of 3.2% with a high JSC of 9.0 mA/cm[2] (Table 1) Judicious optimization of both the acceptor and the polymer donor recently resulted in an improved PCE of 5.45% for 1.1b (Table 1).[6] With a better understanding of the crystallite size on the influence of photovoltaic performance, more attention was focused on designing PDI NFAs with bay substituents (positions 1, 6, 7, and 12) due to synthetic accessibility and demonstrated success in minimizing PDI aggregation. Twisted structures can provide more anisotropic charge transport similar to that of fullerenes and twisted perylene diimide structures, both of which show excellent charge transport properties
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