We study the charge transfer (CT) states in small-molecule blend heterojunctions comprising the nonpolar donor, tetraphenyldibenzoperiflanthene (DBP), and the acceptor, C70, using electroluminescence and steady-state and time-resolved photoluminescence spectroscopy along with density functional theory calculations. We find that the CT exciton energy blue shifts as the C70 concentration in the blend is either decreased or increased away from 50 vol %. At 20 K, the increase in CT state lifetime is correlated with the increasing diameter of C70 nanocrystallites in the blends. A quantum confinement model is used to quantitatively describe the dependence of both CT energy and lifetime on the C70 or DBP domain size. Two discrete CT emission peaks are observed for blends whose C70 concentration is >65%, at which point C70 nanocrystallites with diameters >4 nm appear in high-resolution transmission electron micrographs. The presence of two CT states is attributed to coexistence of crystalline C70 and amorphous phases in the blends. Furthermore, analysis of CT dissociation efficiency versus photon energy suggests that the >90% dissociation efficiency of delocalized CT2 states from the crystalline phase significantly contributes to surprisingly efficient photogeneration in highly dilute (>80% C70) DBP/C70 heterojunctions.
We demonstrate the concentration dependence of C60 absorption in solid solutions of C60 and bathocuprione (BCP), revealing a nonlinear decrease of the C60 charge transfer (CT) state absorption. These blends are utilized to study the photocurrent contribution of the CT in bilayer organic photovoltaics (OPVs); 1:1 blends produce 40% less photocurrent. As exciton blocking electron transporting layers, the blends achieve power conversion efficiencies of 5.3%, an increase of 10% compared to conventional buffers.
The unique properties of organic semiconductors, such as flexibility and lightness, are increasingly important for information displays, lighting and energy generation. But organics suffer from both static and dynamic disorder, and this can lead to variable-range carrier hopping, which results in notoriously poor electrical properties, with low electron and hole mobilities and correspondingly short charge-diffusion lengths of less than a micrometre. Here we demonstrate a photoactive (light-responsive) organic heterostructure comprising a thin fullerene channel sandwiched between an electron-blocking layer and a blended donor:C fullerene heterojunction that generates charges by dissociating excitons. Centimetre-scale diffusion of electrons is observed in the fullerene channel, and this can be fitted with a simple electron diffusion model. Our experiments enable the direct measurement of charge diffusivity in organic semiconductors, which is as high as 0.83 ± 0.07 square centimetres per second in a C channel at room temperature. The high diffusivity of the fullerene combined with the extraordinarily long charge-recombination time yields diffusion lengths of more than 3.5 centimetres, orders of magnitude larger than expected for an organic system.
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