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Article Abstract

Donor-acceptor organic solar cells often show low open-circuit voltages (V ) relative to their optical energy gap (E ) that limit power conversion efficiencies to ~12%. This energy loss is partly attributed to the offset between E and that of intermolecular charge transfer (CT) states at the donor-acceptor interface. Here we study charge generation occurring in PIPCP:PCBM, a system with a very low driving energy for initial charge separation (E -E  ~ 50 meV) and a high internal quantum efficiency (η  ~ 80%). We track the strength of the electric field generated between the separating electron-hole pair by following the transient electroabsorption optical response, and find that while localised CT states are formed rapidly (<100 fs) after photoexcitation, free charges are not generated until 5 ps after photogeneration. In PIPCP:PCBM, electronic disorder is low (Urbach energy <27 meV) and we consider that free charge separation is able to outcompete trap-assisted non-radiative recombination of the CT state.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5773693PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-02457-5DOI Listing

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