Abstract

We measured the picoseconds (ps) transient dynamics of photoexcitations in blends of poly(3-hexyl-thiophene) (P3HT; donors-D) and fullerene [6,6]-phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM; acceptor-A), using the transient pump/probe photomodulation technique in an unprecedented broad spectral range from 0.25 to 2.5 eV, and compared the results with organic solar cell performance based on the same blends. In D-A blends with maximum domain separation such as regio-regular P3HT/PCBM with (1.2:1) weight ratio having solar cell power conversion efficiency of \ensuremath{\sim}4$%$, we found that, although the photogenerated intrachain excitons in the polymer nano-domains decay within \ensuremath{\sim}10 ps, no charge polarons are generated on their expense up to \ensuremath{\sim}2 ns. Instead, there is a buildup of charge transfer (CT) excitons at the D-A interfaces having the same kinetics as the exciton decay, which dissociate into separate polarons in the D and A domains at a much later time ($\ensuremath{\gg}\phantom{\rule{-0.16em}{0ex}}\phantom{\rule{-0.16em}{0ex}}1$ ns). This two-step charge photogeneration process may be typical in organic bulk heterojunction cells. Although the CT excitons are photogenerated on the exciton expense much faster in D-A blends having smaller domain size such as in regio-random P3HT/PCBM, their dissociation is less efficient because of larger binding energy. This explains the poor solar cell power conversion efficiency (0.1$%$) based on this blend. Our results support the two-step charge photogeneration mechanism in polymer/fullerene blends and emphasize the important role of the CT binding energy in generating free charge polarons in organic solar cells.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call