TY - JOUR
T1 - Corrole-BODIPY Dyad as Small-Molecule Donor for Bulk Heterojunction Solar Cells
AU - Mishra, Ruchika
AU - Basumatary, Biju
AU - Singhal, Rahul
AU - Sharma, Ganesh D.
AU - Sankar, Jeyaraman
N1 - Funding Information:
*E-mail: gdsharma273@gmail.com (G.D.S.). *E-mail: sankar@iiserb.ac.in (J.S.). ORCID Jeyaraman Sankar: 0000-0001-9101-4675 Author Contributions The manuscript was written through contributions of all authors. All authors have given approval to the final version of the manuscript Funding R.M. acknowledges CREST-IISER Bhopal, MHRD-FAST, New Delhi, for fellowship and B.B. & J.S. acknowledges DST-SERB EMR/2016/005768 for funding. G.D.S. and R.S. acknowledge DST−SERI for funding.
Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge IISER Bhopal for providing infrastructure. R.M. acknowledges CREST-MHRD and B.B. acknowledges UGC, New Delhi, for fellowship.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2018 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2018/9/19
Y1 - 2018/9/19
N2 - Dyes based on charge-transfer (CT) characteristics are attractive candidates for organic photovoltaics due to their intense and broad absorption window. In these molecular frameworks, electron-rich donors and electron-deficient acceptors are covalently linked to achieve an effective CT process. Corrole, a tetrapyrrolic congener of porphyrin, is an excellent example of an electron-rich molecule with a large molar extinction coefficient. BODIPY, on the other hand, is a well-known electron-deficient bypyrrolic boron difluoride complex with intense absorption complementary to the corrole. A combination of these two structural motifs should result in a dyad having a wide absorption window, which will be suitable for organic photovoltaics. Herein, a corrole derivative has been envisaged as an efficient donor for solution-processed bulk heterojunction solar cells with PC71BM as an acceptor for the first time. The current molecule exhibits broad absorption in the visible range in solution as well as in thin films, with a high molar extinction coefficient and a low band gap of 1.79 eV. Frontier molecular orbital energy levels were found to be complementary to those of the well-known acceptor PC71BM. The optimized devices based on Cor-BODIPY:PC71BM showed a high power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 6.6% with Jsc = 11.46 mA/cm2, Voc = 0.90 V, and FF = 0.61. A remarkable value of incident photon-to-current conversion efficiency (IPCE) of 61% has also been observed.
AB - Dyes based on charge-transfer (CT) characteristics are attractive candidates for organic photovoltaics due to their intense and broad absorption window. In these molecular frameworks, electron-rich donors and electron-deficient acceptors are covalently linked to achieve an effective CT process. Corrole, a tetrapyrrolic congener of porphyrin, is an excellent example of an electron-rich molecule with a large molar extinction coefficient. BODIPY, on the other hand, is a well-known electron-deficient bypyrrolic boron difluoride complex with intense absorption complementary to the corrole. A combination of these two structural motifs should result in a dyad having a wide absorption window, which will be suitable for organic photovoltaics. Herein, a corrole derivative has been envisaged as an efficient donor for solution-processed bulk heterojunction solar cells with PC71BM as an acceptor for the first time. The current molecule exhibits broad absorption in the visible range in solution as well as in thin films, with a high molar extinction coefficient and a low band gap of 1.79 eV. Frontier molecular orbital energy levels were found to be complementary to those of the well-known acceptor PC71BM. The optimized devices based on Cor-BODIPY:PC71BM showed a high power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 6.6% with Jsc = 11.46 mA/cm2, Voc = 0.90 V, and FF = 0.61. A remarkable value of incident photon-to-current conversion efficiency (IPCE) of 61% has also been observed.
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U2 - 10.1021/acsami.8b08519
DO - 10.1021/acsami.8b08519
M3 - Article
C2 - 30136584
AN - SCOPUS:85053355432
SN - 1944-8244
VL - 10
SP - 31462
EP - 31471
JO - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
JF - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
IS - 37
ER -