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Limitations and Perspectives on Triplet‐Material‐Based Organic Photovoltaic Devices
Author(s) -
Jin Yingzhi,
Zhang Yanxin,
Liu Yanfeng,
Xue Jie,
Li Weiwei,
Qiao Juan,
Zhang Fengling
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
advanced materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.707
H-Index - 527
eISSN - 1521-4095
pISSN - 0935-9648
DOI - 10.1002/adma.201900690
Subject(s) - materials science , exciton , organic solar cell , singlet fission , photovoltaic system , organic semiconductor , nanotechnology , charge carrier , photocurrent , optoelectronics , singlet state , physics , polymer , electrical engineering , condensed matter physics , engineering , nuclear physics , composite material , excited state
Abstract Organic photovoltaic cells (OPVs) have attracted broad attention and become a very energetic field after the emergence of nonfullerene acceptors. Long‐lifetime triplet excitons are expected to be good candidates for efficiently harvesting a photocurrent. Parallel with the development of OPVs based on singlet materials (S‐OPVs), the potential of triplet materials as photoactive layers has been explored. However, so far, OPVs employing triplet materials in a bulk heterojunction have not exhibited better performance than S‐OPVs. Here, the recent progress of representative OPVs based on triplet materials (T‐OPVs) is briefly summarized. Based on that, the performance limitations of T‐OPVs are analyzed. The shortage of desired triplet materials with favorable optoelectronic properties for OPVs, the tradeoff between long lifetime and high binding energy of triplet excitons, as well as the low charge mobility in most triplet materials are crucial issues restraining the efficiencies of T‐OPVs. To overcome these limitations, first, novel materials with desired optoelectronic properties are urgently demanded; second, systematic investigation on the contribution and dynamics of triplet excitons in T‐OPVs is necessary; third, close multidisciplinary collaboration is required, as proved by the development of S‐OPVs.