4.8 Article

Impact of Acceptor Quadrupole Moment on Charge Generation and Recombination in Blends of IDT-Based Non-Fullerene Acceptors with PCE10 as Donor Polymer

Journal

ADVANCED ENERGY MATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 28, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/aenm.202100839

Keywords

charge generation; non‐ fullerene acceptors; organic photovoltaics; quadrupole moment; ultrafast spectroscopy

Funding

  1. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), Office of Sponsored Research (OSR) [OSR-2018-CARF/CCF-3079, OSR-CRG2018-3746]
  2. BMBF [FKZ 13N13661, FKZ 13N13656]
  3. European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation program Widening materials models [646259]
  4. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie [844655]
  5. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [844655] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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The study compares the device performance, energetic landscape, and photophysics of rhodanine and dicyanovinyl end-capped IDT-based NFAs in PCE10-based solar cells, revealing how the acceptors' quadrupole moments affect various processes like exciton quenching, charge dissociation, and recombination losses. The results demonstrate that the acceptors' electron affinity controls the open circuit voltage, while geminate and non-geminate recombination are influenced by the acceptors' quadrupole moments.
Advancing non-fullerene acceptor (NFA) organic photovoltaics requires the mitigation of the efficiency-limiting processes. Acceptor end-group and side-chain engineering are two handles to tune properties, and a better understanding of their specific impact on the photophysics could facilitate a more guided acceptor design. Here, the device performance, energetic landscape, and photophysics of rhodanine and dicyanovinyl end-capped IDT-based NFAs, namely, O-IDTBR and O-IDTBCN, in PCE10-based solar cells are compared by transient optical and electro-optical spectroscopy techniques and density functional theory calculations. It is revealed how the acceptors' quadrupole moments affect the interfacial energetic landscape, in turn causing differences in exciton quenching, charge dissociation efficiencies, and geminate versus non-geminate recombination losses. More precisely, it is found that the open circuit voltage (V-OC) is controlled by the acceptors' electron affinity (EA), while geminate and non-geminate recombination, and the field dependence of charge generation, rely on the acceptors' quadrupole moments. The kinetic parameters and yields of all processes are determined, and it is demonstrated that they can reproduce the performance differences of the devices' current-voltage characteristics in carrier drift-diffusion simulations. The results provide insight into the impact of the energetic landscape, specifically the role of the quadrupole moment of the acceptor, beyond trivial considerations of the donor-acceptor energy offsets.

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