Three-dimensional molecular donors combined with polymeric acceptors for high performance fullerene-free organic photovoltaic devices†
Abstract
Non-fullerene acceptor based organic photovoltaic devices (OPVs) reported so far are inferior to those derived from fullerenes. This increases the speculation on whether donors need to be tailored for advancing non-fullerene OPVs. We explored herein two direct arylation-derived diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP)-based three-dimensional (3D) donors that can deliver respectable power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) of 4.64% and 4.02% with polymeric acceptor N2200 blends, surpassing those obtained from PC71BM (3.56% and 3.22%, respectively). It is found that these 3D-shaped molecular donors can yield improved photo-to-current conversion and balanced charge transport when blending with the linear N2200 polymer. This finding suggests that engineering molecular geometry can be a promising approach for developing high-performance materials.