1 research outputs found
On the Role of Charge Transfer Excitations in Non-Fullerene Acceptors for Organic Photovoltaics
Through the development of new non-fullerene electron acceptor (NFA)
materials, such as Y6 and its molecular derivatives, the power conversion
efficiencies of organic photovoltaics (OPVs) have now exceeded 19%. However,
despite this rapid progress, our fundamental understanding of the unique
optical and electronic properties of these Y-series NFAs is lacking, and this
currently limits progress in material design. In this work, we provide a
detailed computational-experimental characterisation of the archetypal NFA, Y6.
To explain the significant broadening and red shift of the absorption spectrum
observed when moving from the solution phase to the solid state, we first rule
out more typical causes, such as J-aggregation. Instead, by considering the
role of charge transfer (CT) excitations and their mixing with Frenkel exciton
(FE) states, we can computationally reproduce the experimental absorption
spectra of Y6 with excellent accuracy. Using transient absorption spectroscopy,
we provide evidence for this dense manifold of FE-CT hybrid electronic
excitations in Y6 through the prominent sub-picosecond relaxation events
following supra band gap excitation. Furthermore, through sub band gap
excitation, we also find states with polaronic character in Y6 that are in a
dynamic equilibrium with the FE-CT hybrid states. Magnetic resonance
spectroscopies reveal that these polaronic states are polaron pairs, most
likely located on neighbouring Y6 molecules, not free charge carriers, as has
been previously suggested. Thus, this new understanding of how the solid-state
packing motif directly controls the optical and electronic properties of
Y-series NFAs opens the door to intelligently design NFA materials to further
increase OPV performance.Comment: 31 pages, 7 figure