posted on 2019-10-08, 12:39authored byFrancesco Tintori, Audrey Laventure, Gregory C. Welch
Herein,
we investigate the role of processing solvent additives on the formation
of polymer–perylene diimide bulk-heterojunction active layers
for organic photovoltaics using both spin-coating and slot-die coating
methods. We compare the effect of 1,8-diiodooctane (DIO) and diphenyl
ether (DPE) as solvent additives on the aggregation behavior of the
non-fullerene acceptor, N-annulated perylene diimide dimer (tPDI2N-EH), in neat films and blended films with the benzodithiophene-quinoxaline
(BDT-QX, QX-3) donor polymer, processed from toluene in air. DIO processing
crystallizes the tPDI2N-EH acceptor and leads to the decreased
solar cell performance. DPE processing has a more subtle effect on
the bulk-heterojunction morphology and leads to an improved solar
cell performance. A comparison of the spin-coating vs slot-die coating
methods shows that the effect of DPE is prominent for the slot-die
coated active layers. While similar device power conversion efficiencies
are achieved with active layers coated with both methods (ca. 7.3%
vs 6.5%), the use of DPE improves the film quality when the slot-die
coating method is employed.