Naphthalenothiophene imide-based polymer exhibiting over 17% efficiency

2021 
Summary Developing novel electron-deficient monomers is crucially important for the future development of non-fullerene organic solar cells. Here, we report a new electron-deficient monomer naphthalenothiophene imide (NTI) and NTI-based copolymers PNTB and PNTB-2T. The strong electron-withdrawing ability of NTI could effectively lower the HOMO level of the polymer that facilitates the tuning of the polymer’s physical properties while simultaneously maintaining the low-lying HOMO value. Polymer chains modification by introducing extra thiophenes results in the closed π−π stacking and ordered polymer chain packing of PNTB-2T and is proven to be an effective strategy to increase the device performance. Thus, solar cell devices for PNTB-2T:Y6 exhibit an efficiency of 16.72%, which is further enhanced to 17.35% by the third component PC71BM, whereas that for PNTB:Y6 is only 3.81%. Importantly, PNTB-2T-based devices exhibit excellent batch-to-batch reproducibility. These features make this family of polymer donors very promising and the design strategies will enlighten future development of high-performance polymer donors for organic solar cells (OSC).
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