19.31% binary organic solar cell and low non-radiative recombination enabled by non-monotonic intermediate state transition

Jiehao Fu(Hong Kong Polytechnic University), W.K. Fong(Hong Kong Polytechnic University), Heng Liu(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Chieh‐Szu Huang(University of California, Los Angeles), Xinhui Lu(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Shirong Lu(Taizhou University), Maged Abdelsamie(King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals), Tim Kodalle(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Carolin M. Sutter‐Fella(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Yang Yang(University of California, Los Angeles), Gang Li(Hong Kong Polytechnic University)
Nature Communications
March 30, 2023
Cited by 565Open Access
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Abstract

Non-fullerene acceptors based organic solar cells represent the frontier of the field, owing to both the materials and morphology manipulation innovations. Non-radiative recombination loss suppression and performance boosting are in the center of organic solar cell research. Here, we developed a non-monotonic intermediate state manipulation strategy for state-of-the-art organic solar cells by employing 1,3,5-trichlorobenzene as crystallization regulator, which optimizes the film crystallization process, regulates the self-organization of bulk-heterojunction in a non-monotonic manner, i.e., first enhancing and then relaxing the molecular aggregation. As a result, the excessive aggregation of non-fullerene acceptors is avoided and we have achieved efficient organic solar cells with reduced non-radiative recombination loss. In PM6:BTP-eC9 organic solar cell, our strategy successfully offers a record binary organic solar cell efficiency of 19.31% (18.93% certified) with very low non-radiative recombination loss of 0.190 eV. And lower non-radiative recombination loss of 0.168 eV is further achieved in PM1:BTP-eC9 organic solar cell (19.10% efficiency), giving great promise to future organic solar cell research.


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