Structure–Property Relationships with Functionalized Subphthalocyanines: Toward Photovoltaic Devices More Stable to Photooxidative Degradation Mediated by Singlet Oxygen

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In this work, the overarching goal of improving the photooxidative stability of organic components used in photovoltaic devices is addressed, focusing on the common problem of degradation mediated by singlet molecular oxygen. Through a systematic exploration of boron subphthalocyanines (SubPcs), the influence of donor and acceptor substituents on the SubPc's redox properties has been examined, including the SubPc's ability to (1) act as a photosensitizer for singlet oxygen generation and (2) deactivate singlet oxygen are examined. How singlet oxygen formation and removal are influenced by linking together three SubPcs in a compact structure and by linking a SubPc to another molecular unit of relevance for organic photovoltaics (indenofluorene-extended tetrathiafulvalene) is also examined. Synthetic protocols rooted in acetylenic scaffolding, experimental and computational structure–property relationships (optical and redox properties, singlet oxygen quantum yields, and removal kinetics), and characteristics of a functional photovoltaic device using a SubPc molecule are presented, demonstrating that cyano functionalization results in remarkably enhanced organic photovoltaic device stability.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAdvanced Functional Materials
ISSN1616-301X
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2024

Bibliographical note

Correction to: https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202400681

Funding Information:
The Independent Research Fund Denmark, Technology and Production Sciences (0136‐00081B), and the Arab Fund Fellowship Program (A.A.E.‐S.) are acknowledged for financial support.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Wiley-VCH GmbH.

    Research areas

  • chromophores, fused-ring systems, photovoltaics, redox chemistry, singlet oxygen

ID: 378821953