Dilution effect for highly efficient multiple-component organic solar cells

Abstract

A strategy based on molecular intermixing of two highly miscible components enables the demonstration of high efficiency multiple-component organic solar cells. Although the multiple-component (MC) blend strategy has been frequently used as a very effective way to improve the performance of organic solar cells (OSCs), there is a strong need to understand the fundamental working mechanism and material selection rule for achieving optimal MC-OSCs. Here we present the `dilution effect’ as the mechanism for MC-OSCs, where two highly miscible components are molecularly intermixed. Contrary to the aggregation-induced non-radiative decay, the dilution effect enables higher luminescence quantum efficiencies and open-circuit voltages (V-OC) in MC-OSCs via suppressed electron-vibration coupling. The continuously broadened bandgap together with reduced electron-vibration coupling also explains the composition-dependent V-OC in ternary blends well. Moreover, we show that electrons can transfer between different acceptors, depending on the energy offset between them, which contributes to the largely unperturbed charge transport and high fill factors in MC-OSCs. The discovery of the dilution effect enables the demonstration of a high power conversion efficiency of 18.31% in an MC-OSC.

Publication
NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY
David Ginger
David Ginger
B. Seymour Rabinovitch Endowed Chair in Chemistry

David Ginger is the the B. Seymour Rabinovitch Endowed Chair in Chemistry at the University of Washington, and the PI of the ginger group