Low-Bandgap Porphyrins for Highly Efficient Organic Solar Cells: Materials, Morphology, and Applications

Adv Mater. 2020 Aug;32(32):e1906129. doi: 10.1002/adma.201906129. Epub 2020 Jun 25.

Abstract

With developments in materials, thin-film processing, fine-tuning of morphology, and optimization of device fabrication, the performance of organic solar cells (OSCs) has improved markedly in recent years. Designing low-bandgap materials has been a focus in order to maximize solar energy conversion. However, there are only a few successful low-bandgap donor materials developed with near-infrared (NIR) absorption that are well matched to the existing efficient acceptors. Porphyrin has shown great potential as a useful building block for constructing low-bandgap donor materials due to its large conjugated plane and strong absorption. Porphyrin-based donor materials have been shown to contribute to many record-high device efficiencies in small molecule, tandem, ternary, flexible, and OSC/perovskite hybrid solar cells. Specifically, non-fullerene small-molecule solar cells have recently shown a high power conversion efficiency of 12% using low-bandgap porphyrin. All these have validated the great potential of porphyrin derivatives as effective donor materials and made DPPEZnP-TRs a family of best low-bandgap donor materials in the OSC field so far. Here, recent progress in the rational design, morphology, dynamics, and multi-functional applications starting from 2015 will be highlighted to deepen understanding of the structure-property relationship. Finally, some future directions of porphyrin-based OSCs are presented.

Keywords: organic solar cells; porphyrin; solar cell morphology.

Publication types

  • Review