Computational design and selection of optimal organic photovoltaic materials

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Date
2011-08
Authors
O'Boyle, Noel M.
Campbell, Casey M.
Hutchison, Geoffrey R.
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American Chemical Society
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Abstract
Conjugated organic polymers are key building blocks of low-cost photovoltaic materials. We have examined over 90 000 copolymers using computational predictions to solve the "inverse design" of molecular structures with optimum properties for highly efficient solar cells (specifically matching optical excitation energies and excited-state energies). Our approach, which uses a genetic algorithm to search the space of synthetically accessible copolymers of six or eight monomer units, yields hundreds of candidate copolymers with predicted efficiencies over 8% (the current experimental record), including many predicted to be over 10% efficient. We discuss trends in polymer sequences and found in the most frequent monomers and dimers in these highly efficient targets and derive design rules for the selection of appropriate donor and acceptor molecules. We show how additional computationally intensive filtering steps can be used, for example, to eliminate targets likely to have poor hole mobilities. Our method effectively targets optimum electronic structure and optical properties far more efficiently than time-consuming serial experiments or computational studies and can be applied to similar problems in other areas of materials science.
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Keywords
Molecular force field , Heterojunction solar cells , Energy conversion efficiency , Density functional theory , Genetic algorithm , Charge transport , Heterocyclic oligomers , Reorganisation energy , Virtual exploration , Geometric structure
Citation
O'Boyle, NM; Campbell, CM; Hutchison, GR; (2011) 'Computational Design and Selection of Optimal Organic Photovoltaic Materials'. Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 115 :16200-16210. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp202765c
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Copyright © 2011 American Chemical Society