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Influence of Acceptor Type and Polymer Molecular Weight on the Mechanical and Photovoltaic Properties of Polymer Solar Cells

Invited

Abstract

The mechanical robustness of polymer solar cells (PSCs) is of great importance to ensure the long-term stability and enable their use as power-generators in flexible and stretchable electronics. Here, we present a comparative study of the mechanical properties of small-molecule acceptor (SMA)-based, polymer acceptors (PA)-based, and fullerene-based PSCs. We chose ITIC, P(NDI2OD-T2), and PCBM as three representative acceptor materials and blended them with the same polymer donor. To understand the difference between the mechanical properties of SMA-based and PA-based PSCs, we control the number-average molecular weight (Mn) of P(NDI2OD-T2) from 15 to 163 kg mol-1 in all-PSCs. The high Mn PA-based-PSCs exhibited a high strain at fracture of 31.1%, which is 9- and 28-fold higher than those of SMA-PSCs and PCBM-PSCs, respectively. The superior mechanical robustness of all-PSCs is attributed to using a PA above the critical molecular weight (Mc), which produces tie molecules and polymer entanglements that dissipate substantial mechanical strain energy with large plastic deformation. The connectivity between the crystalline domains generated by PA tie chains leads to high charge mobilities and photovoltaics performances of all-PSCs. Also, this feature explains very high donor:acceptor composition tolerance of all-PSCs in the photovoltaic and mechanical performances. Therefore, our work highlights the importance of incorporating high Mn PAs above the Mc for producing the PSCs with excellent mechanical robustness and device performance.

Presenters

  • Bumjoon Kim

    KAIST

Authors

  • Bumjoon Kim

    KAIST