Abstract

The exciton migration mechanism in organic photovoltaic devices is still an ambiguity owing to the insufficient understanding of molecular arrangement on a microscopic scale. Herein, we reveal the relationship between the molecular stacking modes and exciton migration for a representative fused-ring electron acceptor, namely, ITIC. The precise molecular stacking patterns are extracted, and directional Coulombic couplings are calculated based on the information of a single-crystal structure, which proves the anisotropic character for exciton motion. The theoretical analysis results indicate ultrafast exciton migration along the head-to-tail stacking directions with maximum migration length of 330 nm in the finite lifetime of 1 ns. Experimentally, the exciton diffusion length is determined to be 183 nm by exciton-exciton annihilation measurement. This work reveals head-to-tail type intermolecular stacking induces strong anisotropic Coulombic coupling, leading to the ultrafast and long-range exciton migration in nonfullerene systems.

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