"Green" organic photovoltaics enabled by molecular engineering

© K. Sivula 2018 EPFL

© K. Sivula 2018 EPFL

LIMNO scientists demonstrate that molecular photovoltaics can be fabricated without toxic chlorinated solvents via melt-processing with a custom-made compatibilizer molecule.

Melt-processing of organic semiconductors (OSCs) is a promising environmentally-friendly technique that can alleviate dependence on toxic chlorinated solvents. While melt-processed single-component OSC devices (e.g.field-effect-transistors) have been demonstrated, multi-component bulk heterojunctions (BHJs) for organic photovoltaics (OPVs) remain a challenge. The LIMNO lab at EPFL has now demonstrated a strategy that affords tunable BHJ phase segregation and domain sizes from a single-phase homogeneous melt by employing strongly-crystalline small-molecule OSCs together with a customized molecular compatibilizing (MCP) additive. An optimized photoactive BHJ with 50 wt% MCP achieved a device power conversion efficiency of ca. 1% after melting the active layer at 240 °C (15 min, followed by slow cooling) before deposition of the top electrode. BHJ morphology characterization using atomic force and Kelvin probe microscopy, X-ray diffraction, and photo-luminescence measurements further demonstrate the trade-off between free charge generation and transport with respect to MCP loading in the BHJ. In addition, a functional OPV was also obtained from the melt-processing of dispersed micron-sized solid BHJ particles into a smooth and homogeneous thin-film by using the MCP approach. These results demonstrate that molecular compatibilization is a key prerequisite for further developments towards true solvent-free melt-processed BHJ OPV systems. The full results are published in the RSC journal Green Chemistry with Aiman Rahmanudin as the first author. 

Funding

The European Research Commission (ERC starting grant “CEMOS” Project 336506) and the Swiss National Science Foundation (200021_169215) are acknowledged for financial support of this work