Issue 10, 2012

Functional fullerenes for organic photovoltaics

Abstract

Tremendous progress has been made on the design and processing of new active and interfacial materials to enable organic photovoltaics to achieve high power conversion efficiencies of >10%. In this Feature Article the development of functional fullerenes as (1) acceptors, (2) electron selective layers, and (3) morphology stabilizers for bulk heterojunction polymer solar cells is reviewed. In addition to the standard PCBM based acceptors, a wide variety of newly developed fullerene-derived molecules have appeared in the past few years and started to show very encouraging photovoltaic performance when they were blended with low bandgap conjugated polymers. New fullerene derivatives with proper molecular design can also serve as electron selective interfacial materials and morphology stabilizers for the bulk heterojunction layer, which are essential to improve the interfacial property and long term stability of polymer solar cells. Although there still are many challenges ahead before practical polymer solar cells will arrive in the market place, the research in functional fullerenes deserves to have more attention in order to expedite this development process.

Graphical abstract: Functional fullerenes for organic photovoltaics

Article information

Article type
Feature Article
Submitted
11 Oct 2011
Accepted
19 Dec 2011
First published
20 Jan 2012

J. Mater. Chem., 2012,22, 4161-4177

Functional fullerenes for organic photovoltaics

C. Li, H. Yip and A. K.-Y. Jen, J. Mater. Chem., 2012, 22, 4161 DOI: 10.1039/C2JM15126J

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