In organic photovoltaics, morphological control of donor and acceptor domains on the nanoscale is key for efficient exciton diffusion and dissociation, carrier transport, and suppression of recombination losses. To realise this, here, we demonstrated a double-fibril network based on ternary donor:acceptor morphology with multi-length scales constructed by combining ancillary conjugated polymer crystallizers and non-fullerene acceptor filament assembly. Using this approach, we achieved an average power conversion efficiency of 19.3% (certified 19.2%). The success lies in the good match between the photoelectric parameters and the morphological characteristic lengths, which utilizes the excitons and free charges efficiently. This strategy leads to enhanced exciton diffusion length (hence exciton dissociation yield) and reduced recombination rate, hence minimizing photon-to-electron losses in the ternary devices as compared to their binary counterparts. The double-fibril network morphology strategy minimizes losses and maximizes the power output, offering the possibility towards 20% power conversion efficiencies in single-junction organic photovoltaics. MainOrganic semiconductors offer the advantage of high optical absorption and tunable energy levels, enabling thin-film solar cells with high light-to-electron conversion efficiencies over a wide range of wavelengths [1][2][3][4] . Desipte recent progresses, the performance of organic solar cells (OSCs) is still limited by non-ideal exciton and charge transport, which depend not only on the electronic structure of organic semiconductors but also on the nanostructure that is formed by material crystallization and phase separation in a bulk heterojunction (BHJ) setting [5][6][7][8] . A suitable sized phase-separated morphology that balances crystalline region and mixing domain on the nanoscale is therefore needed to further push the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of OSCs, however it is a
The trade‐off between the open‐circuit voltage (Voc) and short‐circuit current density (Jsc) has become the core of current organic photovoltaic research, and realizing the minimum energy offsets that can guarantee effective charge generation is strongly desired for high‐performance systems. Herein, a high‐performance ternary solar cell with a power conversion efficiency of over 18% using a large‐bandgap polymer donor, PM6, and a small‐bandgap alloy acceptor containing two structurally similar nonfullerene acceptors (Y6 and AQx‐3) is reported. This system can take full advantage of solar irradiation and forms a favorable morphology. By varying the ratio of the two acceptors, delicate regulation of the energy levels of the alloy acceptor is achieved, thereby affecting the charge dynamics in the devices. The optimal ternary device exhibits more efficient hole transfer and exciton separation than the PM6:AQx‐3‐based system and reduced energy loss compared with the PM6:Y6‐based system, contributing to better performance. Such a “two‐in‐one” alloy strategy, which synergizes two highly compatible acceptors, provides a promising path for boosting the photovoltaic performance of devices.
Manipulating charge generation in a broad spectral region has proved to be crucial for nonfullerene‐electron‐acceptor‐based organic solar cells (OSCs). 16.64% high efficiency binary OSCs are achieved through the use of a novel electron acceptor AQx‐2 with quinoxaline‐containing fused core and PBDB‐TF as donor. The significant increase in photovoltaic performance of AQx‐2 based devices is obtained merely by a subtle tailoring in molecular structure of its analogue AQx‐1. Combining the detailed morphology and transient absorption spectroscopy analyses, a good structure–morphology–property relationship is established. The stronger π–π interaction results in efficient electron hopping and balanced electron and hole mobilities attributed to good charge transport. Moreover, the reduced phase separation morphology of AQx‐2‐based bulk heterojunction blend boosts hole transfer and suppresses geminate recombination. Such success in molecule design and precise morphology optimization may lead to next‐generation high‐performance OSCs.
resulting in inefficient charge separation and collection. [7][8][9] However, recent progresses show quite steep climbing of power conversion efficiency (PCE) for all-PSCs, reaching a value over 10%, [10][11][12] under systematic optimization, leaving a large gap to be filled in understanding the mechanism of morphology evolution. Polymer blends that reach nanoscaled phase separation in organic photovoltaic (OPV) application have distinctive advantages. They are more suitable for printing fabrication because of their good filmforming ability and mechanical flexibility, prominent device stability, and readily tunable ink viscosity. [13][14][15][16][17] Such benefits make all-PSC unique in scalable OPV fabrication, which also leads to boosted interest in understanding and manipulating the morphology. Initiative efforts on all-PSC printing have been surveyed, showing PCEs way below device made by spin-coating. [16,18] The mystery lies in morphology control, of which BHJ thin film is typical nonequilibrium nature that film-drying kinetics dictates the final nanostructure composed of crystalline networks and mixed and phase-separated domains. [19][20][21] It has been shown that solar cells using polymer:non-fullerene acceptor blends processed by slot die printing have exceed 11% in PCE, [22][23][24][25][26][27][28] from which we think that fine-tuning of morphology in all-PSCs could reach a similar level once a All-polymer solar cells (all-PSCs) exhibit excellent stability and readily tunable ink viscosity, and are therefore especially suitable for printing preparation of large-scale devices. At present, the efficiency of state-of-the-art all-PSCs fabricated by the spin-coating method has exceeded 11%, laying the foundation for the preparation and practical utilization of printed devices.A high power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 11.76% is achieved based on PTzBI-Si:N2200 all-PSCs processing with 2-methyltetrahydrofuran (MTHF, an environmentally friendly solvent) and preparation of active layers by slot die printing, which is the top efficient for all-PSCs. Conversely, the PCE of devices processed by high-boiling point chlorobenzene is less than 2%. Through the study of film formation kinetics, volatile solvents can freeze the morphology in a short time, and a more rigid conformation with strong intermolecular interaction combined with the solubility limit of PTzBI-Si and N2200 in MTHF results in the formation of a fibril network in the bulk heterojunction. The multilength scaled morphology ensures fast transfer of carriers and facilitates exciton separation, which boosts carrier mobility and current density, thus improving the device performance. These results are of great significance for large-scale printing fabrication of high-efficiency all-PSCs in the future. Polymer Solar Cells
A thieno[3,4-b]thiophene-based electron acceptor, ATT-1, is designed and synthesized. ATT-1 exhibits a planar conjugated framework, broad absorption with a large absorption coefficient, and a slightly high LUMO energy level. Bulk-heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells based on PTB7-Th electron donor and ATT-1 electron acceptor delivered power conversion efficiencies of up to 10.07%, which is among the best performances reported for non-fullerene BHJ solar cells using PTB7-Th as the electron donor.
Inspired by the remarkable promotion of power conversion efficiency (PCE), commercial applications of organic photovoltaics (OPVs) can be foreseen in near future. One of the most promising applications is semitransparent (ST) solar cells that can be utilized in value-added applications such as energy-harvesting windows. However, the single-junction STOPVs utilizing fullerene acceptors show relatively low PCEs of 4%-6% due to the limited sunlight absorption because it is a dilemma that more photons need to be harvested in UV-vis-near-infrared (NIR) region to generate high photocurrent, which leads to the significant reduction of device transparency. This study describes the development of a new small-bandgap electron-acceptor material ATT-2, which shows a strong NIR absorption between 600 and 940 nm with an E of 1.32 eV. By combining with PTB7-Th, the as-cast OPVs yield PCEs of up to 9.58% with a fill factor of 0.63, an open-circuit voltage of 0.73 V, and a very high short-circuit current of 20.75 mA cm . Owing to the favorable complementary absorption of low-bangap PTB7-Th and small-bandgap ATT-2 in NIR region, the proof-of-concept STOPVs show the highest PCE of 7.7% so far reported for single-junction STOPVs with a high transparency of 37%.
With an indenoindene core, a new thieno[3,4-b]thiophene-based small-molecule electron acceptor, 2,2'-((2Z,2'Z)-((6,6'-(5,5,10,10-tetrakis(2-ethylhexyl)-5,10-dihydroindeno[2,1-a]indene-2,7-diyl)bis(2-octylthieno[3,4-b]thiophene-6,4-diyl))bis(methanylylidene))bis(5,6-difluoro-3-oxo-2,3-dihydro-1H-indene-2,1-diylidene))dimalononitrile (NITI), is successfully designed and synthesized. Compared with 12-π-electron fluorene, a carbon-bridged biphenylene with an axial symmetry, indenoindene, a carbon-bridged E-stilbene with a centrosymmetry, shows elongated π-conjugation with 14 π-electrons and one more sp carbon bridge, which may increase the tunability of electronic structure and film morphology. Despite its twisted molecular framework, NITI shows a low optical bandgap of 1.49 eV in thin film and a high molar extinction coefficient of 1.90 × 10 m cm in solution. By matching NITI with a large-bandgap polymer donor, an extraordinary power conversion efficiency of 12.74% is achieved, which is among the best performance so far reported for fullerene-free organic photovoltaics and is inspiring for the design of new electron acceptors.
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