Perylene imides have been an object of research for 100 years and their derivatives are key n-type semiconductors in the field of organic electronics. While perylene diimides have been applied in many electronic and photonic devices, their use can be traced back to the first efficient organic solar cell. By functionalizing different positions of the in total 12 positions (four peri, four bay, and four ortho-positions) on the perylene core, perylene imides with significantly different optical, electronic and morphological properties may be prepared. Perylene imides and their derivatives have been used in several types of organic photovoltaics, including flat-, and bulk-heterojunction devices as well as dye-sensitized solar cells. Additionally perylene imides-based copolymers or oligomers play an important role in single junction devices. In this review, the relationship between the photovoltaic performance and the structure of perylene imides is discussed.
Thermal stability of hybrid solar cells containing spiro-OMeTAD as hole-transporting layer is investigated. It is demonstrated that fully symmetrical spiro-OMeTAD is prone to crystallization, and growth of large crystalline domains in the hole-transporting layer is one of the causes of solar cell degradation at elevated temperatures, as crystallization of the material inside the pores or on the interface affects the contact between the absorber and the hole transport. Suppression of the crystal growth in the hole-transporting layer is demonstrated to be a viable tactic to achieve a significant increase in the solar cell resistance to thermal stress and improve the overall lifetime of the device. Findings described in this publication could be applicable to hybrid solar cell research as a number of well-performing architectures rely heavily upon doped spiro-OMeTAD as hole-transporting material.
The role of alkyl chain substitution on the phase formation and core dynamics is studied in a series of diphenylamine functionalized perylenemonoimides (PMIs), by X-ray scattering, calorimetry and site-specific solid-state NMR techniques. In addition, the strong dipole associated with the donor-acceptor character of the molecules allow an investigation of the dynamics with dielectric spectroscopy. The self-assembly revealed an ordered phase only in PMIs with branched alkyl chains. This phase comprises a helical stacking of molecules with a molecular twist angle of 60 degrees. Results from solid-state NMR further pointed out the importance of intramolecular hydrogen bonding in stabilizing the intracolumnar packing within the ordered phase. Moreover, the core dynamics are frozen as revealed by the value of the dynamic order parameters and the reduced strength of dipolar relaxation. The kinetics of phase transformation from the isotropic to the ordered phase proceeds via a nucleation and growth mechanism, and the rates are dominated by the nucleation barrier. Within the isotropic phase the core dynamics display strong temperature dependence with rates that depend on the number of methylene units in the alkyl chains.
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