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Tweaking the Molecular Geometry of a Tetraperylenediimide Acceptor

  • Han Han
  • , Lik Kuen Ma
  • , Lin Zhang
  • , Yikun Guo
  • , Yunke Li
  • , Han Yu
  • , Wei Ma*
  • , He Yan*
  • , Dahui Zhao*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

23 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Partial flattening of the spatially extended molecular scaffold has been employed as an effective tactic to improve the device performance of a perylenediimide (PDI)-based small-molecule acceptor because the less twisted yet not completely planar molecular geometry is anticipated to improve the molecular packing and thereby attain a more suitable balance between the carrier transport ability and phase domain size. A small-molecule acceptor BF-PDI comprising four α-substituted PDI units attached around a 9,9′-bifluorenylidene (BF) central moiety is designed and studied in polymer solar cells. The BF group is deemed a ring-fused analogue of the tetraphenylethylene (TPE) unit. Due to the less twisted and better conjugated BF skeleton, BF-PDI displays more delocalized lowest unoccupied molecular orbital. By virtue of both the electronic and steric effects, BF-PDI is suggested to bring about superior intermolecular stacking and donor-acceptor phase separation morphology in blend films. Indeed, the experimental results show that BF-PDI displays improved charge transport ability and a higher power-conversion efficiency of 8.05% than that of TPE-PDI. Grazing-incidence wide-angle X-ray diffraction and resonant soft X-ray scattering confirm the more compact and ordered molecular packing as well as smaller domain sizes in the P3TEA/BF-PDI blend.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6970-6977
Number of pages8
JournalACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
Volume11
Issue number7
Early online date22 Jan 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Feb 2019

User-Defined Keywords

  • bifluorenylidene
  • nonfullerene acceptor
  • organic solar cells
  • perylenediimide
  • small-molecule acceptor
  • tetraphenylethylene

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