Impact
of Aryl End Group Engineering of Donor Polymers
on the Morphology and Efficiency of Halogen-Free Solvent-Processed
Nonfullerene Organic Solar Cells
End
group engineering on the side chain of π-conjugated donor
polymers is explored as an effective way to develop efficient photovoltaic
devices. In this work, we designed and synthesized three new π-conjugated
polymers (PBDT-BZ-1, PBDT-S-BZ, and PBDT-BZ-F) with terminal aryl
end groups on the side chain of chlorine-substituted benzo[1,2-b:4,5b′]dithiophene (BDT). End group
modifications showed notable changes in energy levels, dipole moments,
exciton lifetimes, energy losses, and charge transport properties.
Remarkably, the three new polymers paired with IT-4F (halogen-free
solvent processed/toluene:DPE) displayed high power conversion efficiencies
(PCEs) compared to a polymer (PBDT-Al-5) without a terminal end group
(PCE of 7.32%). Interestingly, PBDT-S-BZ:IT-4F (PCE of 13.73%) showed
a higher PCE than the benchmark PM7:IT-4F. The improved performance
of PBDT-S-BZ well correlates with its improved charge mobility, well-interdigitated
surface morphology, and high miscibility with a low Flory–Huggins
interaction parameter (1.253). Thus, we successfully established a
correlation between the end group engineering and bulk properties
of the new polymers for realizing the high performance of halogen-free
nonfullerene organic solar cells