The development of energy-efficient non-fullerene acceptors (NFAs) has attracted much attention in producing efficient organic solar cells (OSCs). These innovative materials are considered a promising alternative to traditional fullerene acceptors because they absorb a broader light range and potentially enhance the OSC performance. Herein, we engineered eleven new asymmetric caterpillar-shaped materials with an A1-D-A2-A1 core as NFAs for OSCs. These efficient materials offer a high absorption efficiency, wide energy level range, and efficient charge transport capabilities. To engineer these caterpillar-shaped NFAs (FT1-FT11), we performed various synergistic modulations of end-capped electron-withdrawing moieties and side-chain engineering on the synthetic reference molecule (FT). The electron and hole reorganization energies, binding energy, transition energy, transition density analysis, electrostatic potential, and photovoltaic characterizations have been performed for these designed caterpillar-shaped (FT1–FT11) series. The designed materials (FT1–FT11) showed a lower binding energy of 0.45 eV, a narrower bandgap (2.11 eV), higher absorption (ranges from 700.44 nm to 781.05), and low electron and hole mobilities (0.0029 and 0.0031) compared to reference molecule FT. To investigate the charge transport process, we employed polymer donor PTB7-Th and efficient NFA acceptor FT11 to establish a donor:acceptor complex (FT11:PTB7-Th). The complex study demonstrates a significant charge transformation at the donor-acceptor interface. As a result, the developed compounds (FT1–FT11), with their superior optoelectronic capabilities, could be viewed as a viable and sustainable choice to fabricate next-generation efficient OSCs.
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