Fullerene−Oligophenylenevinylene Hybrids:  Synthesis, Electronic Properties, and Incorporation in Photovoltaic Devices

Jean‐François Eckert(Université de Strasbourg), Jean‐François Nicoud(Université de Strasbourg), Jean‐François Nierengarten(Université de Strasbourg), Shenggao Liu(University of Miami), Luis Echegoyen(University of Miami), Francesco Barigelletti(University of Miami), Nicola Armaroli(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Lahoussine Ouali(University of Groningen), V. V. Krasnikov(Institute of Molecular Biology and Biophysics), Georges Hadziioannou
Journal of the American Chemical Society
July 21, 2000
Cited by 343

Abstract

Fullerene derivatives in which an oligophenylenevinylene (OPV) group is attached to C60 through a pyrrolidine ring have been prepared by 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of the azomethine ylides generated in situ from the corresponding aldehydes and sarcosine. Electrochemical and photophysical studies have revealed that ground-state electronic interactions between the covalently bonded OPV moiety and the fullerene sphere are small. The photophysical investigations have also shown that both in dichloromethane and benzonitrile solution an efficient singlet−singlet OPV → C60 photoinduced energy-transfer process takes place, and occurrence of electron transfer, if any, is by far negligible relative to energy transfer. The C60−OPV derivatives have been incorporated in photovoltaic devices, and a photocurrent could be observed showing that photoinduced electron transfer does take place under these conditions. However, the efficiency of the devices is limited by the fact that photoinduced electron transfer from the OPV moiety to the C60 sphere must compete with an efficient energy transfer. The latter process, as studied in solution, leads to the population of the fullerene lowest singlet excited state, found to lie slightly lower in energy than the charge-separated state expected to yield electron/hole pairs. Thus, only a small part of the absorbed light is able to contribute effectively to the photocurrent.


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