Low-cost synthesis of small molecule acceptors makes polymer solar cells commercially viable.

Nat Commun

Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, CAS Key Laboratory of Organic Solids, Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 100190, Beijing, China.

Published: June 2022


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Article Abstract

The acceptor-donor-acceptor (A-D-A) or A-DA'D-A structured small molecule acceptors (SMAs) have triggered substantial progress for polymer solar cells (PSCs). However, the high-cost of the SMAs impedes the commercial viability of such renewable energy, as their synthesis via the classical pyridine-catalyzed Knoevenagel condensation usually suffers from low reaction efficiency and tedious purifying work-up. Herein, we developed a simple and cheap boron trifluoride etherate-catalyzed Knoevenagel condensation for addressing this challenge, and found that the coupling of the aldehyde-terminated D unit and the A-end groups could be quantitatively finished in the presence of acetic anhydride within 15 minutes at room temperature. Compared with the conventional method, the high reaction efficiency of our method is related to the germinal diacetate pathway that is thermodynamically favorable to give the final products. For those high performing SMAs (such as ITIC-4F and Y6), the cost could be reduced by 50% compared with conventional preparation. In addition to the application in PSCs, our synthetic approach provides a facile and low-cost access to a wide range of D-A organic semiconductors for emerging technologies.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9237043PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-31389-yDOI Listing

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