Web Release Date: February 16,
Charge Carrier Formation in Polythiophene/Fullerene Blend Films Studied by Transient Absorption Spectroscopy
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Department of Chemistry, Imperial College London, Exhibition Road, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom, Merck Chemicals, Chilworth Science Park, Southampton SO16 7QD, United Kingdom, and Department of Physics, Imperial College London, Prince Consort Road, London SW7 2BW, United Kingdom
Received August 31, 2007

Abstract:
We report herein a comparison of the photophysics of a series of polythiophenes with ionization
potentials ranging from 4.8 to 5.6 eV as pristine films and when blended with 5 wt % 1-(3-methoxycarbonyl)propyl-1-phenyl-[6,6]C61 (PCBM). Three polymers are observed to give amorphous films, attributed to a
nonplanar geometry of their backbone while the other five polymers, including poly(3-hexylthiophene), give
more crystalline films. Optical excitation of the pristine films of the amorphous polymers is observed by
transient absorption spectroscopy to give rise to polymer triplet formation. For the more crystalline pristine
polymers, no triplet formation is observed, but rather a short-lived (~100 ns), broad photoinduced absorption
feature assigned to polymer polarons. For all polymers, the addition of 5 wt % PCBM resulted in 70-90%
quenching of polymer photoluminescence (PL), indicative of efficient quenching of polythiophene excitons.
Remarkably, despite this efficient exciton quenching, the yield of dissociated polymer+ and PCBM- polarons,
assayed by the appearance of a long-lived, power-law decay phase assigned to bimolecular recombination
of these polarons, was observed to vary by over 2 orders of magnitude depending upon the polymer
employed. In addition to this power-law decay phase, the blend films exhibited short-lived decays assigned,
for the amorphous polymers, to neutral triplet states generated by geminate recombination of bound radical
pairs and, for the more crystalline polymers, to the direct observation of the geminate recombination of
these bound radical pairs to ground. These observations are discussed in terms of a two-step kinetic model
for charge generation in polythiophene/PCBM blend films analogous to that reported to explain the
observation of exciplex-like emission in poly(p-phenylenevinylene)-based blend films. Remarkably, we find
an excellent correlation between the free energy difference for charge separation (
GCSrel) and yield of the
long-lived charge generation, with efficient charge generation requiring a much larger
GCSrel than that
required to achieve efficient PL quenching. We suggest that this observation is consistent with a model
where the excess thermal energy of the initially formed polaron pairs is necessary to overcome their
Coulombic binding energy. This observation has important implications for synthetic strategies to optimize
organic solar cell performance, as it implies that, at least devices based on polythiophene/PCBM blend
films, a large
GCSrel (or LUMO level offset) is required to achieve efficient charge dissociation.
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