1 research outputs found
Charge Generation Measured for Fullerene–Helical Nanofilament Liquid Crystal Heterojunctions
The helical nanofilament (HNF) liquid
crystal phase is an ordered architecture exhibiting interesting properties
for charge transport. It is a small molecule self-assembly of stacked
and twisted crystalline layers, which form alignable organic nanorods
with half the surface area of the filaments consisting of aromatic
sublayer edges. HNFs mixed with an electron acceptor generate an intriguing
network for photoinduced electron transfer (PET). In this work, we
characterize the structure of the HNF phase as processed into thin
films with transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X-ray diffraction
(XRD). Additionally, we measure the flash-photolysis time-resolved
microwave conductivity (TRMC) in samples where the HNF phase is fabricated
into heterojunctions with the fullerenes C60 and PC60BM, prototypical electron acceptors for organic photovoltaics.
Two distinct microstructures of the thin films were identified and
compared for PET. A near-unity charge generation yield is observed
in a bilayer of HNFs with C60. Moreover, the HNF phase
is shown to be 10× better at charge generation than a lamellar
structuring of the same components. Thus, the HNF phase is shown to
be a good charge-generation interface
