4.8 Article

Photophysical pathways in efficient bilayer organic solar cells: The importance of interlayer energy transfer

Journal

NANO ENERGY
Volume 84, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.nanoen.2021.105924

Keywords

Organic solar cells; Bilayer; Bulk heterojunction; Exciton diffusion; Resonant energy transfer; Non-fullerene acceptors; Fused-ring electron acceptors

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korea government (MSIT) [NRF-2016M1A2A2940914, 2019M1A2A2065614, 2019R1A2C2085290, 2019R1A6A1A11044070]
  2. Marsden fund of New Zealand [VUW1916]
  3. Rutherford Foundation is New Zealand
  4. National Research Foundation of Korea [4120200213669] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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In planar bilayer heterojunction devices, long-range layer-to-layer energy transfer plays a critical role in enabling efficient organic photovoltaic devices. By isolating this effect and excluding charge transfer effects, it is possible to achieve high efficiencies in bilayer OPVs. The high molecular packing densities, absorption coefficients, and long exciton diffusion lengths contribute to exciton harvesting length scales that match light absorption lengths in planar structures.
The development of organic photovoltaic (OPV) cells has long been guided by the idea that excitons - bound electron-hole pairs created by light absorption - diffuse only 5-10 nm. True for many materials, this constraint led to an inherently complex device architecture - the bulk heterojunction - that has obscured our understanding of device physics, and handicapped rational material design. Here, we investigate the photophysics of a series of planar bilayer heterojunction devices incorporating fused-ring electron acceptors with power conversion efficiencies up to 11%. Using ultrafast optical spectroscopy, we demonstrate the importance of long-range layer-tolayer energy transfer in planar structures, isolating this effect by including an insulating layer between the donor and acceptor layers to eliminate charge transfer effects. We show that the slab geometry facilitates substantially longer-range energy transfer than between isolated molecules or small domains. Along with high molecular packing densities, high absorption coefficients, and long exciton diffusion lengths, we show that these effects amount to exciton harvesting length scales that match the light absorption lengths and thereby enable efficient bilayer devices. Our quantitative analysis of bilayer structures also accounts for large domain sizes in bulkheterojunction devices including fused-ring electron acceptors, and it quantifies the importance of strong resonant spectral overlap is for material selection and design for highly efficient OPVs.

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