4.6 Article

Side-Chain Engineering of Nonfullerene Acceptors for Near-Infrared Organic Photodetectors and Photovoltaics

Journal

ACS ENERGY LETTERS
Volume 4, Issue 6, Pages 1401-1409

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsenergylett.9b00721

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of the Navy, Office of Naval Research [N00014-14-1-0580]
  2. Center for Advanced Soft Electronics under the Global Frontier Research Program of the Ministry of Science, ICT & Future Planning, Korea [2011-0031628]
  3. Mitsubishi Chemical Center for Advanced Materials (MC-CAM)
  4. Alexander-von-Humboldt Stiftung

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Narrow bandgap n-type molecular semiconductors are relevant as key materials components for the fabrication nearinfrared organic solar cells (OSCs) and organic photodetectors (OPDs). We thus designed nearly isostructural nonfullerene electron acceptors, except for the choice of solubilizing units, which absorb from 600 to 1100 nm. Specific molecules include CTIC-4F, CO1-4F, and COTIC-4F, whose optical bandgaps are 1.3, 1.2, and 1.1 eV, respectively. Modulation of intramolecular charge transfer characteristics was achieved by replacing alkoxy groups with alkyl groups on thiophene spacers that connect an electron-rich cyclopentadithiophene core to peripheral electronpoor fragments. OSCs incorporating CTIC-4F and CO1-4F with PTB7-Th achieve power conversion efficiencies of over 10% with short-circuit current densities as high as similar to 25 mA.cm(-2). The same blends achieve OPD responsivities of 0.52 A.W-1 at similar to 920 nm. These findings highlight outstanding opportunities to tune further molecular design so that OPDs may ultimately compete with their silicon counterparts.

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