High Miscibility Compatible with Ordered Molecular Packing Enables an Excellent Efficiency of 16.2% in All‐Small‐Molecule Organic Solar Cells

Abstract

In all‐small‐molecule organic solar cells (ASM‐OSCs), a high short‐circuit current (Jsc) usually needs a small phase separation, while a high fill factor (FF) is generally realized in a highly ordered packing system. However, small domain and ordered packing always conflicted each other in ASM‐OSCs, leading to a mutually restricted Jsc and FF. In this study, alleviation of the previous dilemma by the strategy of obtaining simultaneous good miscibility and ordered packing through modulating homo‐ and heteromolecular interactions is proposed. By moving the alkyl‐thiolation side chains from the para‐ to the meta‐position in the small‐molecule donor, the surface tension and molecular planarity are synchronously enhanced, resulting in compatible properties of good miscibility with acceptor BTP‐eC9 and strong self‐assembly ability. As a result, an optimized morphology with multi‐length‐scale domains and highly ordered packing is realized. The device exhibits a long carrier lifetime (39.8 μs) and fast charge collection (15.5 ns). A record efficiency of 16.2% with a high FF of 75.6% and a Jsc of 25.4 mA cm−2 in the ASM‐OSCs is obtained. These results demonstrate that the strategy of simultaneously obtaining good miscibility with high crystallinity could be an efficient photovoltaic material design principle for high‐performance ASM‐OSCs.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Dec 13, 2021
Source ID
10.1002/adma.202106316

Entities

People

  • Dan Deng
  • Harald Ade
  • Huiqiong Zhou
  • Jian‐Qi Zhang
  • Kun Lv
  • Lili Zhang
  • Lixuan Liu
  • Xiangwei Zhu
  • Xuning Zhang
  • Yi Li
  • Zhen Wang
  • Zhixiang Wei
  • Ziqi Zhang

Organizations

  • Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • National Natural Science Foundation of China
  • North Carolina State University
  • Office of Basic Energy Sciences
  • Office of Science
  • United States Department of Energy
  • Youth Innovation Promotion Association

Tags

Readers

  • Optical Physics and Photonics.
  • Polymer Science and Technology
  • Quantum Chemistry