Login / Signup

Medium-Bandgap Small-Molecule Donors Compatible with Both Fullerene and Nonfullerene Acceptors.

Yong HuoCenqi YanBin KanXiao-Fei LiuLi-Chuan ChenChen-Xia HuTsz-Ki LauXinhui LuChun-Lin SunXiangfeng ShaoYongsheng ChenXiaowei ZhanHao-Li Zhang
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2018)
Much effort has been devoted to the development of new donor materials for small-molecule organic solar cells due to their inherent advantages of well-defined molecular weight, easy purification, and good reproducibility in photovoltaic performance. Herein, we report two small-molecule donors that are compatible with both fullerene and nonfullerene acceptors. Both molecules consist of an (E)-1,2-di(thiophen-2-yl)ethane-substituted (TVT-substituted) benzo[1,2-b:4,5-b']dithiophene (BDT) as the central unit, and two rhodanine units as the terminal electron-withdrawing groups. The central units are modified with either alkyl side chains (DRBDT-TVT) or alkylthio side chains (DRBDT-STVT). Both molecules exhibit a medium bandgap with complementary absorption and proper energy level offset with typical acceptors like PC71BM and IDIC. The optimized devices show a decent power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 6.87% for small-molecule organic solar cells and 6.63% for nonfullerene all small-molecule organic solar cells. Our results reveal that rationally designed medium-bandgap small-molecule donors can be applied in high-performance small-molecule organic solar cells with different types of acceptors.
Keyphrases
  • solar cells
  • small molecule
  • protein protein
  • molecular docking
  • water soluble
  • kidney transplantation
  • ionic liquid
  • biofilm formation
  • recombinant human