Resolving the Interfaces in C<sub>60</sub>-SubPC Organic Solar Cells Using Molecular Dynamics Simulations

ORAL

Abstract

Organic photovoltaic cells (OPVs) are still associated with relative low efficiencies despite recent advances. As the performance depends on the molecular dynamics (MD) and structure, it is crucial to understand this relationship at a quantitative level. To do this we analyzed the well-studied dyad of boron subphthalocyanine chloride (SubPC) and C60 using MD simulations to understand the effects of device fabrication scheme on the materials interfaces. We developed order parameters to resolve the interface at the molecular level. Using importance sampling, we find an additional interfacial geometry over the two primary configurations addressed in the previous studies. In addition, we show that, due to an energy barrier between basins, the population of structures depends on the initial set-up which is used to differentiate between the fabrication schemes. We expect that the insight we provide will enhance efforts to design effective OPVs.

*This project utilized the computational resources from NERSC, a U.S. DOE Office of Science User Facility operated under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231, as well as the uHPC cluster managed by the University of Houston and acquired through NSF Award 1531814. We are also grateful to the DOE (DE-SC0016501) and the NSF (PHY-1427654) for their support.

Presenters

  • Jacob Tinnin

    • Department of Physics, University of Houston

Authors

  • Jacob Tinnin

    • Department of Physics, University of Houston
  • Pengzhi Zhang

    • Center for Advanced Computing and Data Science, University of Houston
  • Eitan Geva

    • Department of Chemistry, University of Michigan
  • Barry Dunietz

    • Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Kent State University
  • Margaret Cheung

    • Department of Physics, University of Houston; Center for Theoretical Biological Physics, Rice University
    • Department of Physics, University of Houston
    • University of Houston; Center for Theoretical Biological Physics (Rice University)
    • Center for Theoretical Biological Physics, Rice University
    • University of Houston