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Heavy‐Atom‐Free Room‐Temperature Phosphorescent Rylene Imide for High‐Performing Organic Photovoltaics

Authors :
Ningning Liang
Guogang Liu
Deping Hu
Kai Wang
Yan Li
Tianrui Zhai
Xinping Zhang
Zhigang Shuai
He Yan
Jianhui Hou
Zhaohui Wang
Source :
Advanced Science, Vol 9, Iss 3, Pp n/a-n/a (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

Abstract Organic phosphorescence, originating from triplet excitons, has potential for the development of new generation of organic optoelectronic materials. Herein, two heavy‐atom‐free room‐temperature phosphorescent (RTP) electron acceptors with inherent long lifetime triplet exctions are first reported. These two 3D‐fully conjugated rigid perylene imide (PDI) multimers, as the best nonfullerene wide‐bandgap electron acceptors, exhibit a significantly elevated T1 of ≈2.1 eV with a room‐temperature phosphorescent emission (τ = 66 µs) and a minimized singlet–triplet splitting as low as ≈0.13 eV. The huge spatial congestion between adjacent PDI skeleton endows them with significantly modified electronic characteristics of S1 and T1. This feature, plus with the fully‐conjugated rigid molecular configuration, balances the intersystem crossing rate and fluorescence/phosphorescence rates, and therefore, elevating ET1 to ≈2.1 from 1.2 eV for PDI monomer. Meanwhile, the highly delocalized feature enables the triplet charge‐transfer excitons at donor–acceptor interface effectively dissociate into free charges, endowing the RTP electron acceptor based organic solar cells (OSCs) with a high internal quantum efficiency of 84% and excellent charge collection capability of 94%. This study introduces an alternative strategy for designing PDI derivatives with high‐triplet state‐energy and provides revelatory insights into the fundamental electronic characteristics, photophysical mechanism, and photo‐to‐current generation pathway.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21983844
Volume :
9
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Advanced Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5e3c182d2bfe4dc7aa4b21bfa0845ad4
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202103975