A non-fullerene acceptor with a high relative dielectric constant (εr) over 9 is developed. It offers an efficiency of 8.5%, which is the best result for organic solar cells employing high εr materials. Further research should focus on morphology optimization to make high εr practically useful in devices.
Polymer
solar cells based on PDPP5T and PCBM as donor and acceptor materials,
respectively, were processed from aqueous nanoparticle dispersions. Careful monitoring and optimization
of the concentration of free and surface-bound surfactants in the
dispersion, by measuring the conductivity and ζ-potential, is
essential to avoid aggregation of nanoparticles at low concentration
and dewetting of the film at high concentration. The surfactant concentration
is crucial for creating reproducible processing conditions that aid
in further developing aqueous nanoparticle processed solar cells.
In addition, the effects of adding ethanol, of aging the dispersion,
and of replacing [60]PCBM with [70]PCBM to enhance light absorption
were studied. The highest power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) obtained
are 2.0% for [60]PCBM and 2.4% for [70]PCBM-based devices. These PCEs
are limited by bimolecular recombination of photogenerated charges.
Cryo-TEM reveals that the two components phase separate in the nanoparticles,
forming a PCBM-rich core and a PDPP5T-rich shell and causing a nonoptimal
film morphology.
Developing novel materials that tolerate thickness variations of the active layer is critical to further enhance the efficiency of polymer solar cells and enable large‐scale manufacturing. Presently, only a few polymers afford high efficiencies at active layer thickness exceeding 200 nm and molecular design guidelines for developing successful materials are lacking. It is thus highly desirable to identify structural factors that determine the performance of semiconducting conjugated polymers in thick‐film polymer solar cells. Here, it is demonstrated that thiophene rings, introduced in the backbone of alternating donor–acceptor type conjugated polymers, enhance the fill factor and overall efficiency for thick (>200 nm) solar cells. For a series of fluorinated semiconducting polymers derived from electron‐rich benzo[1,2‐b:4,5‐b′]dithiophene units and electron‐deficient 5,6‐difluorobenzo[2,1,3]thiazole units a steady increase of the fill factor and power conversion efficiency is found when introducing thiophene rings between the donor and acceptor units. The increased performance is a synergistic result of an enhanced hole mobility and a suppressed bimolecular charge recombination, which is attributed to more favorable polymer chain packing and finer phase separation.
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