Low‐Bandgap Porphyrins for Highly Efficient Organic Solar Cells: Materials, Morphology, and Applications

Abstract

With developments in materials, thin‐film processing, fine‐tuning of morphology, and optimization of device fabrication, the performance of organic solar cells (OSCs) has improved markedly in recent years. Designing low‐bandgap materials has been a focus in order to maximize solar energy conversion. However, there are only a few successful low‐bandgap donor materials developed with near‐infrared (NIR) absorption that are well matched to the existing efficient acceptors. Porphyrin has shown great potential as a useful building block for constructing low‐bandgap donor materials due to its large conjugated plane and strong absorption. Porphyrin‐based donor materials have been shown to contribute to many record‐high device efficiencies in small molecule, tandem, ternary, flexible, and OSC/perovskite hybrid solar cells. Specifically, non‐fullerene small‐molecule solar cells have recently shown a high power conversion efficiency of 12% using low‐bandgap porphyrin. All these have validated the great potential of porphyrin derivatives as effective donor materials and made DPPEZnP‐TRs a family of best low‐bandgap donor materials in the OSC field so far. Here, recent progress in the rational design, morphology, dynamics, and multi‐functional applications starting from 2015 will be highlighted to deepen understanding of the structure–property relationship. Finally, some future directions of porphyrin‐based OSCs are presented.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Jun 25, 2020
Source ID
10.1002/adma.201906129

Entities

People

  • Alex K.‐y. Jen
  • Bin Kan
  • Feng Liu
  • Ke Gao
  • Li Nian
  • Thomas Paul Russell
  • Xiangjian Wan
  • Xiaobin Peng
  • Xuebin Chen
  • Yong Cao
  • Yongsheng Chen
  • Yuanyuan Kan

Organizations

  • City University of Hong Kong
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Nankai University
  • National Natural Science Foundation of China
  • Office of Naval Research
  • Program 973
  • Shanghai Jiao Tong University
  • South China Normal University
  • South China University of Technology
  • University of Massachusetts
  • University of Washington

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Materials science

Readers

  • Polymer Science and Technology
  • Solar Photovoltaics and Thermoelectric Devices.
  • Systems Analysis and Design