Open Access Article
Hongda
Wang‡
ab,
Liangang
Xiao‡
c,
Lei
Yan‡
d,
Song
Chen‡
a,
Xunjin
Zhu
*ab,
Xiaobin
Peng
*c,
Xingzhu
Wang
*d,
Wai-Kwok
Wong
*a and
Wai-Yeung
Wong
*ab
aInstitute of Molecular Functional Materials, Department of Chemistry and Institute of Advanced Materials, Hong Kong Baptist University, Waterloo Road, Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong, P. R. China. E-mail: xjzhu@hkbu.edu.hk; wkwong@hkbu.edu.hk; rwywong@hkbu.edu.hk
bHKBU Institute of Research and Continuing Education, Shenzhen Virtual University Park, Shenzhen, 518057, P. R. China
cInstitute of Polymer Optoelectronic Materials and Devices, State Key Laboratory of Luminescent Materials and Devices, South China University of Technology, 381 Wushan Road, Guangzhou 510640, P. R. China. E-mail: chxbpeng@scut.edu.cn
dKey Laboratory of Advanced Functional Polymer Materials of Colleges and Universities of Hunan Province and Key Lab of Environment-friendly Chemistry and Application in Ministry of Education, College of Chemistry, Xiangtan University, Xiangtan 411105, Hunan Province, China. E-mail: xzwang@xtu.edu.cn
First published on 15th March 2016
Porphyrin-based small molecules as donors have long been ignored in bulky heterojunction organic solar cells due to their unfavorable aggregation and the low charge mobility. With the aim of striking a delicate balance between molecular design, morphology, interfacial layer and device fabrication to maximize the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of organic solar cells, three comparable porphyrin-based small molecules with an acceptor–donor–acceptor configuration have been developed for use as donor materials in solution processed small molecule bulk heterojunction organic solar cells. In these molecules, electron-deficient 3-ethylrhodanine is introduced into the electron-rich porphyrin core through 5,15-bis(phenylethynyl) linkers. Structural engineering with 10,20-bis(2-hexylnonyl) aliphatic peripheral substituent on the porphyrin core, instead of the aromatic substituents such as 10,20-bis[3,5-di(dodecyloxyl)phenyl], and 10,20-bis(4-dodecyloxylphenyl), can simultaneously facilitate stronger intermolecular π–π stacking and higher charge transfer mobility in the film, leading to a maximum PCE of 7.70% in a conventional device. The inverted devices have also been demonstrated to have long-term ambient stability and a comparable PCE of 7.55%.
Subsequently, they employed less bulky meso-substituents such as 4-octyloxy-phenyl and 5-(2-ethylhexyl)-thienyl in the new A–D–A porphyrin-cored molecules, which can exhibit stronger intermolecular π–π stacking in the solid state, leading to a higher hole mobility and better photovoltaic performance.25,26 It is obvious that the meso-phenyl substitutions with an almost orthogonal orientation relative to the porphyrin plane significantly prevent the intermolecular π–π stacking, as well as intermolecular charge transport.27 Our recent work further demonstrated that the direct peripheral meso-alkyl substitutions on the porphyrin ring could not only improve the solubility of small molecules in most organic solvents, but also control the film morphology and crystallinity, leading to an enhancement of charge transport.28
To rigorously evaluate the effect of peripheral aromatic or aliphatic meso-substituents of the porphyrin ring on the light harvesting, solubility, morphology, exciton diffusion and dissociation, charge transport and collection, and ultimate PCE, three A–D–A structural type porphyrin-based small molecules were carefully designed and prepared. Typically, 3-ethylrhodanine as the terminal unit bridged by a phenylethynyl moiety with porphyrins {5,15-bis[3,5-di(dodecyloxyl)phenyl]-porphyrinato}zinc(II), [5,15-bis(4-dodecyloxylphenyl)-porphyrinato]zinc(II), and [5,15-bis(2-hexylnonyl)-porphyrinato]zinc(II), afforded 4a, 4b and 4c, respectively (Scheme 1). Subsequently, their photovoltaic performances as donors were investigated systematically in conventional devices with a configuration of ITO/PEDOT:PSS/SM:PC71BM/PFN/Al (where PFN is poly[(9,9-bis(3′-(N,N-dimethylamino)-propyl)-2,7-fluorene)-alt-2,7-(9,9-dioctylfluorene)]). Inverted devices of ITO/Ca/SM:PC71BM/MoO3/Ag were also fabricated and tested in the following studies.
| Comp. | λ max/nm (CH2Cl2) (ε/105 M−1 cm−1) | λ max/nm (film) | λ onset/nm (film) | E ox [V] | E HOMO [eV] | E LUMO [eV] | E optg [eV] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a HOMO levels were measured in DCM with 0.1 M tetrabutylammonium hexafluorophosphate (TBAPF) calibrated with ferrocene/ferrocenium (Fc/Fc+) as an external reference. b The HOMO and LUMO levels were estimated by the following equation: HOMO = −(4.70 + Eox), LUMO = HOMO − EOptg. Optical band gap estimated from the formula of 1240/λonset, λonset is the absorption onset of the film spectrum. | |||||||
| 4a | 475 (1.55), 504 (1.73), 683 (1.39) | 537, 733 | 779 | 0.49 | −5.19 | −3.59 | 1.60 |
| 4b | 484 (1.61), 505 (1.61), 720 (1.53) | 526, 726 | 790 | 0.45 | −5.15 | −3.60 | 1.55 |
| 4c | 472 (1.64), 502 (1.95), 696 (1.81) | 520, 735 | 780 | 0.42 | −5.12 | −3.52 | 1.60 |
There is no significant changes in Soret bands due to minor electronic perturbations between the porphyrin ring and either meso-aliphatic or aromatic substituents.29 In comparison with 4a, the absorption maxima of the Q bands in 4b and 4c exhibit a significant red-shift of 38 and 14 nm, respectively, which indicates a stronger intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) between the donor and acceptor units in 4b and 4c. On the other side, their absorption maxima for both the Soret and Q bands in the thin films were significantly red-shifted, which indicates that a strong π–π intermolecular interaction exists in the solid state due to the optically active J-aggregation.30
Cyclic voltammetry (CV) was performed to investigate the electrochemical properties of 4a–c and the electrochemical data are shown in Table 1. The HOMO energy levels of 4a–c were calculated to be −5.19, −5.15 and −5.12 eV, respectively. Furthermore, the optical band gaps (Eg) for 4a–c were estimated from the absorption spectra in the films with values of 1.60, 1.55 and 1.60 eV, respectively. Therefore the potential levels of the LUMO for 4a–c were obtained from LUMO = HOMO − Eg, with values of −3.59, −3.60 and −3.52 eV, respectively. The HOMO levels of 4a–c are located within the band gap of PC61BM, while the LUMO levels are sufficiently higher (around −3.5 eV) than that of PC61BM (−4.0 eV). The results indicate that 4a–c are compatible with the commonly used acceptor material PC61BM or PC71BM in BHJ OSCs.
:
1, the best but low PCE of 1.42% was obtained, together with a short circuit current (JSC) of 6.44 mA cm−2, an open-circuit voltage (VOC) of 0.76 V, and a fill factor (FF) of 28.9%. The optimized weight ratio of 4b to PC61BM was also found to be 1
:
1, yielding a moderate PCE of 4.55% with VOC of 0.80 V, JSC of 10.09 mA cm−2 and FF of 56.3%. In contrast, the device based on 4c/PC61BM (1
:
1, w/w) received an impressive PCE of 4.98%, with a VOC of 0.89 V, a FF of 52.1%, and a significantly higher JSC of 10.72 mA cm−2 due to its good solubility, high light harvesting properties and strong π–π stacking intermolecular interaction.
| Device | Additive | Annealing time at 90 °C (min) | J SC (mA cm−2) | V OC (V) | FF (%) | PCE (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a
4a–c/PC61BM or 4a–c/PC71BM with a 1 : 1 weight ratio in solar cells with conventional structures based on fresh cells.
b
4c/PC71BM with a 1 : 1.2 weight ratio in solar cells with conventional structures based on fresh cells.
c
4c/PC71BM with a 1 : 1.2 weight ratio in solar cells with inverted structures based on fresh cells.
d
4c/PC71BM with a 1 : 1.2 weight ratio in solar cells with inverted structures with encapsulation based on aging for 3 days.
e
4c/PC71BM with a 1 : 1.2 weight ratio in solar cells with inverted structures with encapsulation based on aging for 10 days.
f
4c/PC71BM with a 1 : 1.2 weight ratio in solar cells with inverted structures with encapsulation based on based on aging for 30 days.
|
||||||
| 4a/PC61BMa | 1% pyridine | 10 | 6.44 | 0.76 | 28.98 | 1.42 |
| 4a/PC71BMa | 1% pyridine | 10 | 7.20 | 0.90 | 48.12 | 3.21 |
| 4b/PC61BMa | 1% pyridine | 10 | 10.09 | 0.80 | 56.33 | 4.55 |
| 4b/PC71BMa | 1% pyridine | 10 | 10.14 | 0.90 | 55.60 | 5.07 |
| 4c/PC61BMa | 1% pyridine | 10 | 10.72 | 0.89 | 52.12 | 4.98 |
| 4c/PC71BMa | 1% pyridine | 10 | 12.14 | 0.89 | 48.07 | 5.20 |
| 4c/PC71BMa | 1% pyridine | 0 | 4.84 | 0.92 | 29.18 | 1.30 |
| 4c/PC71BMa | 1% pyridine | 5 | 12.28 | 0.91 | 54.67 | 6.11 |
| 4c/PC71BMa | 1% pyridine | 20 | 12.22 | 0.90 | 50.35 | 5.54 |
| 4c/PC71BMb | 1% pyridine | 5 | 13.32 | 0.91 | 63.60 | 7.70 |
| 4c/PC71BMc | 1% pyridine | 0 | 6.26 | 0.892 | 38.1 | 2.12 |
| 4c/PC71BMc | 1% pyridine | 5 | 12.89 | 0.901 | 65.1 | 7.55 |
| 4c/PC71BMd | 1% pyridine | — | 12.87 | 0.910 | 64.5 | 7.55 |
| 4c/PC71BMe | 1% pyridine | — | 12.87 | 0.882 | 59.2 | 6.62 |
| 4c/PC71BMf | 1% pyridine | — | 12.53 | 0.876 | 57.0 | 6.26 |
To further optimize their photovoltaic performance in BHJ OSCs, PC71BM was used as the electron acceptor for its higher absorption coefficient in the visible range. As expected, the active layers based on 4a–c/PC71BM (1
:
1, w/w) yielded improved device performances with PCEs of 3.21%, 5.07% and 5.20%, and JSC of 7.2, 10.14, and 12.14 mA cm−2 for 4a, 4b and 4c (Table 2), respectively. Specifically, the devices with PC71BM as the acceptor exhibit an exceptionally higher VOC of 0.90 V, 0.90 V and 0.89 V for 4a, 4b and 4c, respectively. It's not surprising that the morphologies and thus performance of state-of-the-art donor small molecules are sensitive to the choice of fullerene. Peng and co-workers reported that devices based on DPP-porphyrin small molecules performed better with PC61BM as the acceptor rather than PC71BM.24–26 The possible reason is that the solubility of PC71BM in some organic solvents is not as good as that of PC61BM, which leads to an unfavorable morphology and deteriorates the performance of OSCs.31,32 During the device optimization, it was found that the performance of the cells based on 4c could be further improved by reducing the annealing time. When the annealing time is 5 min, the device yielded an impressive PCE of 6.11%, with a JSC of 12.28 mA cm−2, a VOC of 0.91 V, and a FF of 54.6%. Since 4c shows a much better solubility than 4a or 4b in organic solvent, the weight ratio of 4c to PC61BM was further optimized to be 1
:
1.2, yielding the highest PCE of 7.70% with a VOC of 0.91 V, a JSC of 13.32 mA cm−2 and a FF of 63.6%. In general, the energy loss (Eloss), which connects Eg and VOC together and is defined as Eloss = Eg − eVOC, is one of the most important parameters to evaluate solar cells. In this study, an exceptionally high VOC of 0.91 V was obtained for the optimized cell based on 4c, in spite of a high energy loss of 0.69 eV. By comparison, Peng and his co-workers reported a DPP-porphyrin small molecule with a very low energy band gap of 1.37 eV and an open circuit voltage of 0.78 V obtained in BHJ OSCs, corresponding to a very low energy loss of 0.59 eV.26
The external quantum efficiency (EQE) spectra of the optimized devices based on 4a–c are shown in Fig. 2b. The EQE curve of 4c/PC71BM (w/w, 1
:
1.2) with 1% pyridine exhibits efficient photo-electron conversion efficiency from 400 to 800 nm, with the highest EQE value reaching 73% at 735 nm. The calculated JSC integrated from the EQE for 4c is 13.32 mA cm−2 shows a mismatch of about 5% compared to the JSC from the J–V measurement. In comparison, the EQE values of the devices based on 4a or 4b are below 50% in the range of 620–800 nm, resulting in lower JSC values. This is also consistent with the weaker absorptions of 4a and 4b in solution, as compared to 4c. Definitely, the incorporation of the alkyl side chains could indeed improve significantly the photo-electron conversion efficiency.
To circumvent the degradation problem in the conventional structure, the inverted structure has been intensively investigated in polymer-based BHJ solar cells.33–37 Very recently, some SMs have also been explored and have performed well in inverted device architectures.38–42 Hence, an inverted architecture of ITO/Ca/SM:PC71BM/MoO3/Ag has been applied to 4c, which yielded a PCE of 7.55%, corresponding to a JSC of 12.89 mA cm−2, a VOC of 0.91 V, and a FF of 65.1% under the optimized conditions (Fig. 3 and Table 2). It should be noted that the inverted photovoltaic devices were processed and characterized under ambient atmosphere (see ESI†). Although the inverted structure shows a comparable performance to that of the conventional one, the former exhibits impressive stability with the same PCE of 7.55% measured after 3 days of storage in air and retains 83% of the original value even after storage in air for 30 days.
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Fig. 3 The J–V curves (top) and EQE plots (bottom) of the inverted devices with 4c/PC71BM (1 : 1.2, w/w) as-cast (black line) and after annealing for 5 minutes at 90 °C (red line). | ||
:
1, w/w%) was investigated by tapping-mode atomic force microscope (AFM). Additionally, height and phase images were taken from the blend films as shown in Fig. 4. It should be noted that the blend films of 4a–c/PC71BM were prepared with 1% pyridine as an additive, using a procedure identical to that for the active layers in the devices. The values of root-means-square (RMS) roughness are 0.852, 0.780 and 0.567 nm for the blend films 4a–c/PC71BM, respectively. The lowest RMS roughness of 4c/PC71BM indicates that 4c has the best miscibility with PC71BM and may form a finer interpenetrating network to facilitate both exciton separation and charge transport. As expected, the blend film of 4c/PC71BM exhibits a better donor/acceptor interpenetrating network with much smaller phase separation domains (Fig. 4f), which is beneficial for efficient exciton dissociation and charge transporting, and should lead to an increased JSC and FF in BHJ OSCs.43,44 In contrast, surface relief and a larger domain size were observed for the 4a/PC71BM and 4b/PC71BM films, which indicates the poor film-forming characteristics due to the perpendicular aromatic peripheral substitutions on the porphyrin ring. Without a doubt, the unique characteristics of 10,20-bis(5,15-alkyl) substituted porphyrin are expected to form blend films possessing more efficient intermolecular π–π stacking and more suitable surface morphology for BHJ OSCs.
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| Fig. 4 Tapping mode AFM height (a–c) and phase images (d–f) of 4a/PC71BM, 4b/PC71BM, and 4c/PC71BM blend films of the best devices. | ||
As shown in Fig. 5, the phase and height images were taken from the blend films of 4c/PC71BM (1
:
1.2, w/w%) in inverted devices as-casted and after annealing at 90 °C for 5 minutes. The values of the root-means-square (RMS) roughness are 4.48 and 0.88 nm for the blend films 4c/PC71BM, as-cast and after annealing, respectively. Without a doubt, annealing at an appropriate temperature is necessary for the formation of high quality films with nanoscale amorphous domains that produce efficient charge separation and improved solar cell performances.
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Fig. 5 Tapping mode AFM phase images (a and b) and height (c and d) of 4c/PC71BM (1 : 1.2, w/w%) in the inverted devices. | ||
Since the values of JSC and FF are generally reflected by the charge transport properties of the photoactive film, the hole mobilities of the porphyrin/fullerene blend films were measured for a device configuration of ITO/PEDOT:PSS/active layer/MoO3/Al, and were estimated using the space charge limited current (SCLC) model. The J–V characteristics of the polymers and the porphyrin/PC71BM blend films are shown in Fig. S1.† The hole mobilities of the 4a–c/PC71BM blend films were determined to be 1.57 × 10−5 cm2 V−1 s−1 (4a), 8.48 × 10−5 cm2 V−1 s−1 (4b), and 2.18 × 10−4 cm2 V−1 s−1 (4c). Obviously, all the 4a–c/PC71BM blend films show reasonably high hole mobilities appropriate for photovoltaic devices. Notably, the device based on 4c/PC71BM exhibits the highest mobility of about one order of magnitude higher than that based on 4a/PC71BM. This is consistent with the highest JSC values of 13.32 mA cm−2 and the best photovoltaic performance based on the active layer of 4c/PC71BM (1
:
1.2, w/w%). Without a doubt, the enhanced charge transport property is ascribed to the stronger intermolecular π–π stacking interaction and better surface morphology of the blend film of 5,15-dialkylated porphyrin-cored small molecule.45 At the same time, ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (Fig. S2†) shows that the work functions of the annealed layer of ITO/PEDOT:PSS/4a–c:PC71BM decrease gradually from 3.75 eV for 4a, 3.66 eV for 4b, to 3.44 eV for 4c, which also accounts for the device efficiency improvement with the increasing JSC from 7.20 mA cm−2 for 4a and 10.14 mA cm−2 for 4b, to 12.14 mA cm−2 for 4c (Table 2).46
:
1.2, w/w%) which has stronger intermolecular π–π stacking and more suitable surface morphology, the device possesses a much higher JSC, corresponding to the highest PCE of 7.70%. Moreover, the inverted structure based on 4c/PC71BM (1
:
1.2, w/w%) shows a comparable performance to that of the conventional one, and its stability was also investigated revealing the same PCE of 7.55% measured after 3 days of storage and retaining 83% of the original value even after storage in air for 30 days. The primary results demonstrate that porphyrin derivatives can play a more important role as donors in BHJ OSCs by the judicious optimization of their molecular structures and careful device engineering.
Footnotes |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c5sc04783h |
| ‡ H. W., L. X., L. Y. and S. C. contribute equally to this work. |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2016 |