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Sub-picosecond charge-transfer at near-zero driving force in polymer:non-fullerene acceptor blends and bilayers

Authors :
Zhong, Yufei
Causa’, Martina
Moore, Gareth John
Krauspe, Philipp
Xiao, Bo
Günther, Florian
Kublitski, Jonas
Shivhare, Rishi
Benduhn, Johannes
BarOr, Eyal
Mukherjee, Subhrangsu
Yallum, Kaila M.
Réhault, Julien
Mannsfeld, Stefan C. B.
Neher, Dieter
Richter, Lee J.
DeLongchamp, Dean M.
Ortmann, Frank
Vandewal, Koen
Zhou, Erjun
Banerji, Natalie
Kublitski, Jonas/0000-0003-0558-9152
Benduhn
Johannes/0000-0001-5683-9495
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2020), Nature Communications, Zhong, Yufei; Causa', Martina; Moore, Gareth John; Krauspe, Philipp; Xiao, Bo; Günther, Florian; Kublitski, Jonas; Shivhare, Rishi; Benduhn, Johannes; BarOr, Eyal; Mukherjee, Subhrangsu; Yallum, Kaila M.; Réhault, Julien; Mannsfeld, Stefan C. B.; Neher, Dieter; Richter, Lee J.; DeLongchamp, Dean M.; Ortmann, Frank; Vandewal, Koen; Zhou, Erjun; ... (2020). Sub-picosecond charge-transfer at near-zero driving force in polymer:non-fullerene acceptor blends and bilayers. Nature Communications, 11(1) Springer Nature 10.1038/s41467-020-14549-w
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2020.

Abstract

Organic photovoltaics based on non-fullerene acceptors (NFAs) show record efficiency of 16 to 17% and increased photovoltage owing to the low driving force for interfacial charge-transfer. However, the low driving force potentially slows down charge generation, leading to a tradeoff between voltage and current. Here, we disentangle the intrinsic charge-transfer rates from morphology-dependent exciton diffusion for a series of polymer:NFA systems. Moreover, we establish the influence of the interfacial energetics on the electron and hole transfer rates separately. We demonstrate that charge-transfer timescales remain at a few hundred femtoseconds even at near-zero driving force, which is consistent with the rates predicted by Marcus theory in the normal region, at moderate electronic coupling and at low re-organization energy. Thus, in the design of highly efficient devices, the energy offset at the donor:acceptor interface can be minimized without jeopardizing the charge-transfer rate and without concerns about a current-voltage tradeoff.<br />It has been commonly believed that the driving force at the donor-acceptor heterojunction is vital to efficient charge separation in organic solar cells. Here Zhong et al. show that the driving force can be as small as 0.05 eV without compromising the charge transfer rate and efficiency.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....64b8d8044ad1ce71574bdfbecdc8f422