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Suppressing Co‐Crystallization of Halogenated Non‐Fullerene Acceptors for Thermally Stable Ternary Solar Cells.

Authors :
Hultmark, Sandra
Paleti, Sri Harish Kumar
Harillo, Albert
Marina, Sara
Nugroho, Ferry Anggoro Ardy
Liu, Yanfeng
Ericsson, Leif K. E.
Li, Ruipeng
Martín, Jaime
Bergqvist, Jonas
Langhammer, Christoph
Zhang, Fengling
Yu, Liyang
Campoy‐Quiles, Mariano
Moons, Ellen
Baran, Derya
Müller, Christian
Source :
Advanced Functional Materials; 11/25/2020, Vol. 30 Issue 48, p1-10, 10p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

While photovoltaic blends based on non‐fullerene acceptors are touted for their thermal stability, this type of acceptor tends to crystallize, which can result in a gradual decrease in photovoltaic performance and affects the reproducibility of the devices. Two halogenated indacenodithienothiophene‐based acceptors that readily co‐crystallize upon mixing are studied, which indicates that the use of an acceptor mixture alone does not guarantee the formation of a disordered mixture. The addition of the donor polymer to the acceptor mixture readily suppresses the crystallization, which results in a fine‐grained ternary blend with nanometer‐sized domains that do not coarsen due to a high Tg ≈ 200 °C. As a result, annealing at temperatures of up to 170 °C does not markedly affect the photovoltaic performance of ternary devices, in contrast to binary devices that suffer from acceptor crystallization in the active layer. The results indicate that the ternary approach enables the use of high‐temperature processing protocols, which are needed for upscaling and high‐throughput fabrication of organic solar cells. Further, ternary devices display a stable photovoltaic performance at 130 °C for at least 205 h, which indicates that the use of acceptor mixtures allows to fabricate devices with excellent thermal stability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1616301X
Volume :
30
Issue :
48
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Advanced Functional Materials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
147196633
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202005462