@article{PingelArvindKoellnetal.2016, author = {Pingel, Patrick and Arvind, Malavika and K{\"o}lln, Lisa and Steyrleuthner, Robert and Kraffert, Felix and Behrends, Jan and Janietz, Silvia and Neher, Dieter}, title = {p-Type Doping of Poly(3-hexylthiophene) with the Strong Lewis Acid Tris(pentafluorophenyl)borane}, series = {Advanced electronic materials}, volume = {2}, journal = {Advanced electronic materials}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, address = {Hoboken}, issn = {2199-160X}, doi = {10.1002/aelm.201600204}, pages = {7}, year = {2016}, abstract = {State-of-the-art p-type doping of organic semiconductors is usually achieved by employing strong -electron acceptors, a prominent example being tetrafluorotetracyanoquinodimethane (F(4)TCNQ). Here, doping of the semiconducting model polymer poly(3-hexylthiophene), P3HT, using the strong Lewis acid tris(pentafluorophenyl)borane (BCF) as a dopant, is investigated by admittance, conductivity, and electron paramagnetic resonance measurements. The electrical characteristics of BCF- and F(4)TCNQ-doped P3HT layers are shown to be very similar in terms of the mobile hole density and the doping efficiency. Roughly 18\% of the employed dopants create mobile holes in either F-4 TCNQ- or BCF-doped P3HT, while the majority of doping-induced holes remain strongly Coulomb-bound to the dopant anions. Despite similar hole densities, conductivity and hole mobility are higher in BCF-doped P3HT layers than in F(4)TCNQ-doped samples. This and the good solubility in many organic solvents render BCF very useful for p-type doping of organic semiconductors.}, language = {en} } @article{SchubertCollinsMangoldetal.2014, author = {Schubert, Marcel and Collins, Brian A. and Mangold, Hannah and Howard, Ian A. and Schindler, Wolfram and Vandewal, Koen and Roland, Steffen and Behrends, Jan and Kraffert, Felix and Steyrleuthner, Robert and Chen, Zhihua and Fostiropoulos, Konstantinos and Bittl, Robert and Salleo, Alberto and Facchetti, Antonio and Laquai, Frederic and Ade, Harald W. and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Correlated donor/acceptor crystal orientation controls photocurrent generation in all-polymer solar cells}, series = {Advanced functional materials}, volume = {24}, journal = {Advanced functional materials}, number = {26}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1616-301X}, doi = {10.1002/adfm.201304216}, pages = {4068 -- 4081}, year = {2014}, abstract = {New polymers with high electron mobilities have spurred research in organic solar cells using polymeric rather than fullerene acceptors due to their potential of increased diversity, stability, and scalability. However, all-polymer solar cells have struggled to keep up with the steadily increasing power conversion efficiency of polymer: fullerene cells. The lack of knowledge about the dominant recombination process as well as the missing concluding picture on the role of the semi-crystalline microstructure of conjugated polymers in the free charge carrier generation process impede a systematic optimization of all-polymer solar cells. These issues are examined by combining structural and photo-physical characterization on a series of poly(3-hexylthiophene) (donor) and P(NDI2OD-T2) (acceptor) blend devices. These experiments reveal that geminate recombination is the major loss channel for photo-excited charge carriers. Advanced X-ray and electron-based studies reveal the effect of chloronaphthalene co-solvent in reducing domain size, altering domain purity, and reorienting the acceptor polymer crystals to be coincident with those of the donor. This reorientation correlates well with the increased photocurrent from these devices. Thus, effi cient split-up of geminate pairs at polymer/polymer interfaces may necessitate correlated donor/acceptor crystal orientation, which represents an additional requirement compared to the isotropic fullerene acceptors.}, language = {en} } @article{KraffertSteyrleuthnerAlbrechtetal.2014, author = {Kraffert, Felix and Steyrleuthner, Robert and Albrecht, Steve and Neher, Dieter and Scharber, Markus C. and Bittl, Robert and Behrends, Jan}, title = {Charge Separation in PCPDTBT : PCBM Blends from an EPR Perspective}, series = {The journal of physical chemistry}, volume = {118}, journal = {The journal of physical chemistry}, number = {49}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1932-7447}, doi = {10.1021/jp509650v}, pages = {28482 -- 28493}, year = {2014}, language = {en} }