Perylene Diimide Based ``Nanofabric'' Thin Films for Organic Photovoltaic Cells

ORAL

Abstract

We report progress in using a perylene diimide (PDI) nanofabric as an effective electron accepting nanostructure for organic photovoltaics (OPV). A key challenge in OPV continues to be the recovery of electrons after charge separation due to the relatively poor mobility of C60 and related materials. A series of PDI compounds and complexes have been synthesized and used to fabricate nanofibers and thin films using solution and vacuum deposition techniques. Overlaping PDI-based nanofibers form a fast electron-transporting ``nanofabric'' that has been characterized (AFM, PL, UV-vis, etc.) and can be blended with electron donating materials. A solution-processible OPV configuration containing a nanofabric heterojunction (FHJ) of poly(3-hexylthiophene) and the PDI nanofabric was investigated. We observed a significant improvement in power-conversion efficiency due in part to expansion of the interfacial area and the presence of high mobility electron pathways to the LiF/Al electrode.

*This work is supported by the Wright Center for Photovoltaic Innovation and Commercialization, the Institute for Materials Research and the Center for Affordable Nanoengineering of Polymeric Biomedical Devices.

Authors

  • Austin Carter

    • Dept. of Physics, The Ohio State University
  • June Hyoung Park

    • Dept. of Physics, The Ohio State University
  • Yong Min

    • Dept. of Chemistry, The Ohio State University
  • Arthur Epstein

    • Dept. of Physics and Chemistry, The Ohio State University