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Systematic Engineering of Near-Infrared Small Molecules Based on 4H-Cyclopenta[1,2-b:5,4-b']dithiophene Acceptors for Organic Solar Cells.

Muzammil HussainMuhammad AdnanZobia IrshadRiaz HussainHany W Darwish
Published in: ACS omega (2024)
Nonfullerene acceptors (NFAs) have emerged as tremendous materials, efficiently advancing bulk-heterojunction organic solar cells (OSCs) technology. Unlike their fullerene counterparts, NFAs offer the unique advantage of finely tunable electronic energy levels and optical characteristics, which correspond to substantial enhancement in power conversion efficiency of OSCs. Herein, we have introduced a new series of near-infrared NFAs (AY1-AY8) to advance this technology further. Our research deeply investigates the structure-property relationship and thoroughly explores the optical, optoelectronics, photophysical, and photovoltaic characteristics of a synthetic reference molecule (R) and the modeled AY1-AY8 NFAs series. We performed advanced quantum chemical simulations using density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT methods. Additionally, we also estimated key geometric characteristics such as frontier molecular orbitals, hole-electron overlap, density of states, molecular electrostatic potential, molecular excitation and binding energies, transition density matrix, and reorganizational energy of electrons and holes and compared them with those of a synthetic reference molecule (R). Our findings show that all designed materials (AY1-AY8) exhibit red-shift absorption, improved electronic charge mobility, and low binding and excitation energies compared to R. Notably, these designed materials (AY1-AY8) display significantly narrower electronic energy gaps ( E g 1.89-1.71 eV), indicating enhanced charge shifting from the highest occupied molecular orbital to lowest unoccupied molecular orbital and broadening of the absorption spectrum. Moreover, we also revealed a comprehensive study of the donor/acceptor complex of PTB7-Th/AY8 to understand charge shifting between donor and acceptor molecules. Therefore, we strongly recommend this designed (AY1-AY8) series to the experimentalists for the future development of highly efficient OSC devices.
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