Jingbo Zhao
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jingbo Zhao.
Nature Communications | 2014
Yuhang Liu; Jingbo Zhao; Zhengke Li; Cheng Mu; Wei Ma; Huawei Hu; Kui Jiang; Haoran Lin; Harald Ade; He Yan
Although the field of polymer solar cell has seen much progress in device performance in the past few years, several limitations are holding back its further development. For instance, current high-efficiency (>9.0%) cells are restricted to material combinations that are based on limited donor polymers and only one specific fullerene acceptor. Here we report the achievement of high-performance (efficiencies up to 10.8%, fill factors up to 77%) thick-film polymer solar cells for multiple polymer:fullerene combinations via the formation of a near-ideal polymer:fullerene morphology that contains highly crystalline yet reasonably small polymer domains. This morphology is controlled by the temperature-dependent aggregation behaviour of the donor polymers and is insensitive to the choice of fullerenes. The uncovered aggregation and design rules yield three high-efficiency (>10%) donor polymers and will allow further synthetic advances and matching of both the polymer and fullerene materials, potentially leading to significantly improved performance and increased design flexibility.
Energy and Environmental Science | 2015
Jingbo Zhao; Yunke Li; Haoran Lin; Yuhang Liu; Kui Jiang; Cheng Mu; Tingxuan Ma; Joshua Yuk Lin Lai; Huawei Hu; Demei Yu; He Henry Yan
Here we report high-performance small molecule acceptor (SMA)-based organic solar cells (OSCs) enabled by the combination of a difluorobenzothiadiazole donor polymer named PffBT4T-2DT and a SMA named SF-PDI2. It is found that SF-PDI2 matches particularly well with PffBT4T-2DT and non-fullerene OSCs with an impressive VOC of 0.98 V, and a high power conversion efficiency of 6.3% is achieved. Our study shows that PffBT4T-2DT is a promising donor material for SMA-based OSCs, and the selection of a matching SMA is also important to achieve the best OSC performance.
Advanced Materials | 2015
Yuhang Liu; Cheng Mu; Kui Jiang; Jingbo Zhao; Yunke Li; Lu Zhang; Zhengke Li; Joshua Yuk Lin Lai; Huawei Hu; Tingxuan Ma; Rongrong Hu; Demei Yu; Xuhui Huang; Ben Zhong Tang; He Yan
A tetraphenylethylene core-based small molecular acceptor with a unique 3D molecular structure is developed. Bulk-heterojunction blend films with a small feature size (≈20 nm) are obtained, which lead to non-fullerene organic solar cells (OSCs) with 5.5% power conversion efficiency. The work provides a new molecular design approach to efficient non-fullerene OSCs based on 3D-structured small-molecule acceptors.
Advanced Materials | 2014
Cheng Mu; Peng Liu; Wei Ma; Kui Jiang; Jingbo Zhao; Kai Zhang; Zhihua Chen; Zhanhua Wei; Ya Yi; Jiannong Wang; Shihe Yang; Fei Huang; Antonio Facchetti; Harald Ade; He Yan
All-polymer solar cells based on a pair of crystalline low-bandgap polymers (NT and N2200) are demonstrated to achieve a high short-circuit current density of 11.5 mA cm-2 and a power conversion efficiency of up to 5.0% under the standard AM1.5G spectrum with one sun intensity. The high performance of these NT:N2200-based cells can be attributed to the low optical bandgaps of the polymers and the reasonably high and balanced electron and hole mobilities of the NT:N2200 blends due to the crystalline nature of the two polymers.
Advanced Materials | 2015
Haoran Lin; Shangshang Chen; Zhengke Li; Joshua Yuk Lin Lai; Guofang Yang; Terry McAfee; Kui Jiang; Yunke Li; Yuhang Liu; Huawei Hu; Jingbo Zhao; Wei Ma; Harald Ade; He Yan
A 7.3% efficiency non-fullerene polymer solar cell is realized by combining a large-bandgap polymer PffT2-FTAZ-2DT with a small-bandgap acceptor IEIC. The complementary absorption of donor polymer and small-molecule acceptor is responsible for the high-performance of the solar-cell device. This work provides important guidance to improve the performance of non-fullerene polymer solar cells.
Nature Communications | 2016
Zhengke Li; Kui Jiang; Guofang Yang; Joshua Yuk Lin Lai; Tingxuan Ma; Jingbo Zhao; Wei Ma; He Yan
To achieve efficient organic solar cells, the design of suitable donor–acceptor couples is crucially important. State-of-the-art donor polymers used in fullerene cells may not perform well when they are combined with non-fullerene acceptors, thus new donor polymers need to be developed. Here we report non-fullerene organic solar cells with efficiencies up to 10.9%, enabled by a novel donor polymer that exhibits strong temperature-dependent aggregation but with intentionally reduced polymer crystallinity due to the introduction of a less symmetric monomer unit. Our comparative study shows that an analogue polymer with a C2 symmetric monomer unit yields highly crystalline polymer films but less efficient non-fullerene cells. Based on a monomer with a mirror symmetry, our best donor polymer exhibits reduced crystallinity, yet such a polymer matches better with small molecular acceptors. This study provides important insights to the design of donor polymers for non-fullerene organic solar cells.
Advanced Materials | 2016
Yikun Guo; Yunke Li; Omar Awartani; Jingbo Zhao; Han Han; Harald Ade; Dahui Zhao; He Henry Yan
All-polymer solar cells with 7.57% power conversion efficiency are achieved via a new perylenediimide-based polymeric acceptor. Furthermore, the device processed in ambient air without encapsulation can still reach a high power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 7.49%, which is a significant economic advantage from an industrial processing perspective. These results represent the highest PCE achieved from perylenediimide-based polymers.
Advanced Materials | 2016
Jingbo Zhao; Yunke Li; Adrian Hunt; Jianquan Zhang; Huatong Yao; Zhengke Li; Jie Zhang; Fei Huang; Harald Ade; He Henry Yan
A difluorobenzoxadiazole building block is synthesized and utilized to construct a conjugated polymer leading to high-performance thick-film polymer solar cells with a V(OC) of 0.88 V and a power conversion efficiency of 9.4%. This new building block can be used in many possible polymer structures for various organic electro-nic applications.
Advanced Materials | 2017
Yikun Guo; Yunke Li; Omar Awartani; Han Han; Jingbo Zhao; Herald Ade; He Henry Yan; Dahui Zhao
A new polymer acceptor, naphthodiperylenetetraimide-vinylene (NDP-V), featuring a backbone of altenating naphthodiperylenetetraimide and vinylene units is designed and applied in all-polymer solar cells (all-PSCs). With this polymer acceptor, a new record power-conversion efficiencies (PCE) of 8.59% has been achieved for all-PSCs. The design principle of NDP-V is to reduce the conformational disorder in the backbone of a previously developed high-performance acceptor, PDI-V, a perylenediimide-vinylene polymer. The chemical modifications result in favorable changes to the molecular packing behaviors of the acceptor and improved morphology of the donor-acceptor (PTB7-Th:NDP-V) blend, which is evidenced by the enhanced hole and electron transport abilities of the active layer. Moreover, the stronger absorption of NDP-V in the shorter-wavelength range offers a better complement to the donor. All these factors contribute to a short-circuit current density (J sc ) of 17.07 mA cm-2 . With a fill factor (FF) of 0.67, an average PCE of 8.48% is obtained, representing the highest value thus far reported for all-PSCs.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2015
Yuhang Liu; Joshua Yuk Lin Lai; Shangshang Chen; Yunke Li; Kui Jiang; Jingbo Zhao; Zhengke Li; Huawei Hu; Tingxuan Ma; Haoran Lin; Jing Liu; Jie Zhang; Fei Huang; Demei Yu; He Yan
Here we report a series of tetraphenyl carbon-group (tetraphenylmethane (TPC), tetraphenylsilane (TPSi) and tetraphenylgermane (TPGe)) core based 3D-structure non-fullerene electron acceptors, enabling efficient polymer solar cells with a power conversion efficiency (PCE) of up to ∼4.3%. The results show that TPC and TPSi core-based polymer solar cells (PSCs) perform significantly better than that based on TPGe. Our study provides a new approach for designing small molecular acceptor materials for polymer solar cells.