April 22 - 26, 2024
Seattle, Washington
May 7 - 9, 2024 (Virtual)
Symposium Supporters
2024 MRS Spring Meeting
EN04.07.08

Triplet Excitons in Organic Solar Cells

When and Where

Apr 25, 2024
11:15am - 11:45am
Room 328, Level 3, Summit

Presenter(s)

Co-Author(s)

Alexander Gillett1

University Of Cambridge1

Abstract

Alexander Gillett1

University Of Cambridge1
Driven by the development of non-fullerene electron acceptor materials, the performance of organic solar cells (OSCs) has recently shown a remarkable improvement, with power conversion efficiencies nearly doubling from 11% to 19% in less than 10 years. However, the efficiency of OSCs is still lower than inorganic technologies, where efficiencies of &gt;20% are commonplace. This is primarily due to excessive non-radiative recombination in OSCs, which reduces the open circuit voltage from the radiative limit.<br/><br/>In our work, we have identified recombination via low energy triplet excitons as a key factor responsible for the large non-radiative losses in OSCs. In state-of-the-art systems, such as ‘PM6:Y6’, up to 90% of the charge carrier recombination proceeds via triplet exciton states; this reduces the open circuit voltage by up to 60 mV. To address this issue, we propose two viable strategies. First, through the identification of systems where recombination via triplet excitons is suppressed, we demonstrate that significant hybridisation of the molecular triplet exciton and triplet charge transfer state can disfavour terminal recombination into the former. Second, we show that triplet-triplet annihilation has the potential to mitigate against triplet exciton losses by recycling up to half of these states formed back into singlet excitons, providing an opportunity for radiative recombination to occur. Therefore, our findings provide a framework to alleviate non-radiative losses via triplet excitons in OSCs, which could push efficiences towards and beyond the 20% milestone.

Keywords

spectroscopy

Symposium Organizers

Derya Baran, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
Dieter Neher, University of Potsdam
Thuc-Quyen Nguyen, University of California, Santa Barbara
Oskar Sandberg, Åbo Akademi University

Symposium Support

Silver
Enli Technology Co., Ltd.

Bronze
1-Material, Inc.

Session Chairs

Tayebeh Ameri
Thomas Anthopoulos

In this Session