Why ultrafast charge separation occurs in bulk-heterojunction organic solar cells: a multichain tight binding model study
Abstract
Bulk-heterojunction (BHJ) organic solar cells (OSCs) exhibit ultrafast charge separation (UCS) which enables lower geminate charge recombination and high internal quantum efficiency. Unravelling why UCS occurs in BHJ-OSCs is important for the exploration of devices in future, however it is still far from clear. In this work, we build a multichain tight-binding model to study the conditions for realizing UCS. We propose that two conditions are important: (i) the BHJ-OSC has a morphology with donor and acceptor molecules being individually aggregated; (ii) the ratio of the donor/acceptor interfacial coupling to the internal donor/donor and acceptor/acceptor coupling should be smaller than a threshold. In addition, we suggest that increasing the donor/acceptor energetic offset will boost the UCS efficiency. As a fundamental theoretical analysis on the underlying mechanism of UCS, our work provides design rules for optimizing high-performance BHJ OSCs.