Abstract Infrared organic photodetector materials are investigated using transient absorption spectroscopy, demonstrating that ultrafast charge generation assisted by polymer aggregation is essential to compensate for the energy gap law, which dictates that excited state lifetimes decrease as the band gap narrows. Short sub‐picosecond singlet exciton lifetimes are measured in a structurally related series of infrared‐absorbing copolymers that consist of alternating cyclopentadithiophene electron‐rich “push” units and strong electron‐deficient “pull” units, including benzothiadiazole, benzoselenadiazole, pyridalselenadiazole, or thiadiazoloquinoxaline. While the ultrafast lifetimes of excitons localized on individual polymer chains suggest that charge carrier generation will be inefficient, high detectivity for polymer:PC71BM infrared photodetectors is measured in the 0.6 < λ < 1.5 µm range. The photophysical processes leading to charge generation are investigated by performing a global analysis on transient absorption data of blended polymer:PC71BM films. In these blends, charge carriers form primarily at polymer aggregate sites on the ultrafast time scale (within our instrument response), leaving quickly decaying single‐chain excitons unquenched. The results have important implications for the further development of organic infrared optoelectronic devices, where targeting processes such as excited state delocalization over aggregates may be necessary to mitigate losses to ultrafast exciton decay as materials with even lower band gaps are developed.
more »
« less
Aggregation Controlled Charge Generation in Fullerene Based Bulk Heterojunction Polymer Solar Cells: Effect of Additive
Optimization of charge generation in polymer blends is crucial for the fabrication of highly efficient polymer solar cells. While the impacts of the polymer chemical structure, energy alignment, and interface on charge generation have been well studied, not much is known about the impact of polymer aggregation on charge generation. Here, we studied the impact of aggregation on charge generation using transient absorption spectroscopy, neutron scattering, and atomic force microscopy. Our measurements indicate that the 1,8-diiodooctane additive can change the aggregation behavior of poly(benzodithiophene-alt-dithienyl difluorobenzotriazole (PBnDT-FTAZ) and phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM)polymer blends and impact the charge generation process. Our observations show that the charge generation can be optimized by tuning the aggregation in polymer blends, which can be beneficial for the design of highly efficient fullerene-based organic photovoltaic devices.
more »
« less
- Award ID(s):
- 1639429
- PAR ID:
- 10317546
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Polymers
- Volume:
- 13
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2073-4360
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
Solid polymer electrolytes offer potential improvements to lithium ion batteries that include extending their operating temperature range and improving the safe use of the batteries by inhibiting lithium dendrite formation. Because solid polymer electrolytes replace traditional liquid electrolytes as the lithium ion transport medium and also act as the electrode separator, these materials must offer good ionic conductivity along with providing good interfacial contact with the electrode material. This work presents the synthesis and characterization of polymer blends comprised poly(ethylene oxide) and phosphonium ionenes. Ionenes are a class of polycation that includes positive charges within the polymer backbone. Because the positive charge is a part of the polymer chain, the spacing and distribution of these charges have a significant impact on the properties of ionenes. This research focuses on determining the role of charge spacing and distribution of charges along the backbone of phosphonium ionenes on their ability to transport lithium ions. To accomplish this, phosphonium ionenes are blended with low molecular weight poly(ethylene oxide) (e.g. less than 3,000 g/mol) at mass ratios of 20:1, 10:1, and 5:1. The resulting blended solid polymer electrolyte membranes are evaluated for their thermal, mechanical and electrochemical properties along with their charge/discharge performance in coin cell batteries. The dependence of phosphonium ionene structure as well as the composition of SPE blends will be presented.more » « less
-
Abstract Here, a polymer blend active layer that exhibits both electronic and adhesive properties is introduced. Various conjugated polymers are blended with a catechol‐based polymer that shows high adhesion, such that blends serve as the active layer of multifunctional sticky organic thin‐film transistors (OTFTs). Blend films maintain relatively constant field‐effect charge carrier mobility in OTFTs regardless of composition. Lap shear adhesion strength tests show that all blend films exhibit adhesive properties with adhesion values ranging from 0.05 to 4.30 MPa. With relatively consistent mobility and the presence of adhesive properties at different compositions, blends of conjugated and adhesive polymers can lead to next‐generation organic transistors for stable 3D stacking and waterproof adhesive sensors.more » « less
-
Abstract Polymers play an integral role in various applications, from everyday use to advanced technologies. In the era of machine learning (ML), polymer informatics has become a vital field for efficiently designing and developing polymeric materials. However, the focus of polymer informatics has predominantly centered on single-component polymers, leaving the vast chemical space of polymer blends relatively unexplored. This study employs a high-throughput molecular dynamics (MD) simulation combined with active learning (AL) to uncover polymer blends with enhanced thermal conductivity (TC) compared to the constituent single-component polymers. Initially, the TC of about 600 amorphous single-component polymers and 200 amorphous polymer blends with varying blending ratios are determined through MD simulations. The optimal representation method for polymer blends is identified, which involves a weighted sum approach that extends existing polymer representation from single-component polymers to polymer blends. An AL framework, combining MD simulation and ML, is employed to explore the TC of approximately 550,000 unlabeled polymer blends. The AL framework proves highly effective in accelerating the discovery of high-performance polymer blends for thermal transport. Additionally, we delve into the relationship between TC, radius of gyration (Rg), and hydrogen bonding, highlighting the roles of inter- and intra-chain interactions in thermal transport in amorphous polymer blends. A significant positive association between TC andRgimprovement and an indirect contribution from H-bond interaction to TC enhancement are revealed through a log-linear model and an odds ratio calculation, emphasizing the impact of increasingRgand H-bond interactions on enhancing polymer blend TC.more » « less
-
Abstract Understanding the correlation between polymer aggregation, miscibility, and device performance is important to establish a set of chemistry design rules for donor polymers with nonfullerene acceptors (NFAs). Employing a donor polymer with strong temperature‐dependent aggregation, namely PffBT4T‐2OD [poly[(5,6‐difluoro‐2,1,3‐benzothiadiazol‐4,7‐diyl)‐alt‐(3,3″′‐di(2‐octyldodecyl)‐2,2′;5′,2″;5″,2″′‐quaterthiophen‐5,5‐diyl)], also known as PCE‐11 as a base polymer, five copolymer derivatives having a different thiophene linker composition are blended with the common NFA O‐IDTBR to investigate their photovoltaic performance. While the donor polymers have similar optoelectronic properties, it is found that the device power conversion efficiency changes drastically from 1.8% to 8.7% as a function of thiophene content in the donor polymer. Results of structural characterization show that polymer aggregation and miscibility with O‐IDTBR are a strong function of the chemical composition, leading to different donor–acceptor blend morphology. Polymers having a strong tendency to aggregate are found to undergo fast aggregation prior to liquid–liquid phase separation and have a higher miscibility with NFA. These properties result in smaller mixed donor–acceptor domains, stronger PL quenching, and more efficient exciton dissociation in the resulting cells. This work indicates the importance of both polymer aggregation and donor–acceptor interaction on the formation of bulk heterojunctions in polymer:NFA blends.more » « less
An official website of the United States government

