The growing demand for organic electronic
devices warrants further
development of the scalability and green solvent processibility of
π-conjugated materials. Perylene diimide (PDI)-based materials
have shown impressive performance as interlayers for electronic devices
due to a low E
LUMO energy and high charge
mobility in films. The next step in the development of these materials
is the transition toward scalable production and the fabrication of
devices under ambient conditions. Here, we develop a green synthetic
methodology to prepare a series of PDI-based electronically active
materials (X2–5), which can be slot-die-coated
into uniform thin films from green solvents in air. Compounds X2–5 comprised a monomeric PDI core with a functional
cyclic secondary amine appended to the bay region. Bromine or cyano
moieties are incorporated into the molecular scaffold to systematically
tune optoelectronic properties. The utility of these materials is
demonstrated by slot-die coating them from ethanol to serve as cathode
interlayers in prototype air-processed conventional organic photovoltaics.
Using a PM6:Y6 active layer, device power conversion efficiencies
reached 10%, among the best reported under these conditions.
The commercialization of organic solar cell (OSC) technology will require highly reproducible techniques for controlling the morphology of bulk heterojunction blends. Variable-pressure solvent vapor annealing (VP-SVA) is one method for postprocessing organic solar cells with high precision; it can prevent the overannealing of cells that plagues conventional SVA processes. To gain insight into the dynamics of the VP-SVA process, we carried out operando measurements on OSCs with correlated in situ grazing-incidence wide-angle X-ray scattering (GIWAXS) measurements. We show that the partial pressure of solvent vapor controls the length scale of film reordering, with optimal restructuring taking place below the saturation vapor pressure of the solvent. The experiments reveal how the film crystallinity, domain sizes, and percolation pathways evolve over the course of the VP-SVA process and how subtle differences in these morphological parameters differentiate good OSCs from champion cells.
Direct conversion x-ray image detectors offer higher spatial resolution than their indirect counterparts. Organic-inorganic hybrid perovskites are among the most sensitive x-ray photoconductors for these detectors; however, high dark currents...
The synthesis of 6,11-bis-cyano N-H functionalized perylene diimide is reported. Electron withdrawing cyano groups were installed to counter the electron donating cyclic amine moiety with retention of functionality. Solution-processed, air-stable...
Perylene diimide
(PDI) has attracted widespread interest as an
inexpensive electron acceptor for photovoltaic applications; however,
overcrystallization in the bulk heterojunction typically leads to
low device performance. Recent work has addressed this issue by forming
bay-linked PDI dimers and oligomers, where the steric bulk of adjacent
PDI units forces the molecule to adopt a nonplanar structure. This
disrupts the molecular packing and limits domain sizes in the bulk
heterojunction. Unfortunately, the introduction of electron-donating/-withdrawing
groups in the bay region is also the best way to fine-tune the frontier
molecular orbitals (FMOs) of PDI, which is highly desirable from a
device optimization standpoint. This competition for the bay region
has made it difficult for PDI to keep pace with other non-fullerene
acceptors. Here, we report the synthesis of regioisomerically pure
1,7-dicyanoperylene diimide and its dimerization through an imide
linkage. We show that this is an effective strategy to tune the energies
of the FMOs while simultaneously suppressing overcrystallization in
the bulk heterojunction. The resulting acceptor has a low LUMO energy
of −4.2 eV and is capable of accepting photogenerated electrons
from donor polymers with high electron affinities, even when conventional
acceptors such as PDI, PC
71
BM, and ITIC cannot.
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