Progress in Poly (3-Hexylthiophene) Organic Solar Cells and the Influence of Its Molecular Weight on Device Performance

  • Andrew Wadsworth
  • , Zeinab Hamid
  • , Matthew Bidwell
  • , Raja S. Ashraf
  • , Jafar I. Khan
  • , Dalaver H. Anjum
  • , Camila Cendra
  • , Jun Yan
  • , Elham Rezasoltani
  • , Anne A.Y. Guilbert
  • , Mohammed Azzouzi
  • , Nicola Gasparini
  • , James H. Bannock
  • , Derya Baran
  • , Hongbin Wu
  • , John C. de Mello
  • , Christoph J. Brabec
  • , Alberto Salleo
  • , Jenny Nelson
  • , Frédéric Laquai
  • Iain McCulloch

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

111 Scopus citations

Abstract

Poly (3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) was an early frontrunner in the development of donor polymers to be used in organic photovoltaics. A relatively straightforward and inexpensive synthesis suggests that it may be the most viable donor polymer to use in large-scale commercial organic solar cells. Replacing fullerenes with new electron acceptors has led to significant improvements in device performance and stability, with devices now able to exceed an efficiency of 7%. Past studies have reported a dependence of device performance on the molecular weight of the polymer in fullerene-containing blends, however, with nonfullerene acceptors now showing promise a similar study was needed. P3HT blends, with two nonfullerene acceptors (O-IDTBR and EH-IDTBR), were probed using a number of polymer batches with varying molecular weights. O-IDTBR was shown to exhibit a dependence on the polymer molecular weight, with optimal performance achieved with a 34 kDa polymer, while EH-IDTBR displayed an independence in performance with varying polymer molecular weight. Probing the thermal and morphological behavior of the P3HT:O-IDTBR blends suggests that an optimal morphology with pronounced donor and acceptor domains was only achieved with the 34 kDa polymer, and a greater degree of mixing was exhibited in the other blends, likely leading to poorer device performance.

Original languageBritish English
Article number1801001
JournalAdvanced Energy Materials
Volume8
Issue number28
DOIs
StatePublished - 5 Oct 2018

Keywords

  • IDTBR
  • molecular weight
  • nonfullerene
  • organic photovoltaics
  • poly (3-hexylthiophene)

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