Welcome to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory materials discovery database for organic electronic materials. The focus is on materials for organic photovoltaic (OPV) absorber materials but materials suitable for other applications may be found here as well.
You can browse the public Building Blocks here, or directly search the database.
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HXSHSXRR
D1 (BDT )
SHSHXXR2R1Si
D2 (DTS )
NNHXHHHHHXRR
D3 (DINI )
SHSHXXR2R1
D11 (CPDT )
HHXXSOOHH
D18 (EDOT )
HHXXOOHHHHHHHHS
D20 (ProDOT )
R1HXHHR2HXHH
D22 (FLR )
HXHHHXHHNR
D23 (CA )
ONRNROSHHXSHHX
A1 (DPP )
ONXXOSR
A2 (TPD )
HHNOORSXX
A4 (TID )
XXOONNOOR1R2
A5 (PMDI )
OXXOSR1R2
A9 (CTD )
XXRSSF
A23 (TTF )
XXRSSH
A31 (TT )
OXXOSRF
A42 (CTD.F )
OXXOSFF
A43 (CTD.FF )
OXXOSHH
A48 (CTD.HH )
HHHH
R0 (H )
OXHHH
R1 (MK )
OXHHH
R2 (MeO )
XHHH
R3 (Me )
OOXHHH
R4 (ME )
HHHHXHHH
R5 (iPr )
HHHHHHHXHH
R6 (iBu )
HXHHHH
R7 (Et )
HHHHHXHH
R10 (Bn )
OOXHHHHHHHHH
R12 (iPrAc )
NX
R13 (Cy )
SXHHH
R14 (Th )
SXHHR
T1 (T.Th )
SHXSHR
T2 (T.TT )
SXHHSHHR
T3 (T.DiTh )
SHHSHHRSHHX
T4 (T.TriTh )
HHHHHHHN
T5 (T.CyVinPh )
SXHHX
Sp2 (Th )
HHXXSOOHH
Sp3 (EDOT )
NXHHXHHH
Sp4 (MePy )
SHXSHX
Sp5 (TT )

OPV is a rapidly emerging PV technology with improving cell efficiency (currently ~11.5% and greater in tandem cells), encouraging initial lifetime (>5,000 hours un-encapsulated), and potential for roll-to-roll manufacturing processes. The building-integrated PV market may find OPV especially attractive because of the availability of absorbers in several different colors and the ability to make efficient transparent devices.

OPV's great strength lies in the diversity of organic materials that can be designed and synthesized for the absorber, acceptor, and interfaces. As part of NREL’s OPV research, we develop and apply new high-performance absorber materials for improved performance and lifetime, focusing on improving absorption of the solar spectrum, photo-voltage and stability to photo-oxidation.

Combinatorial generation of candidate materials and electronic structure prediction

Candidate materials are generated by combining elements from a library of organic multi-ring molecular units (building blocks) to produce complex molecules and polymers. The building blocks may be functionalized in different ways to tune the electronic properties of the resulting molecules. Code that can automatically generate molecular structures given appropriately annotated files describing building blocks is included in the STREAMM toolkit, available at http://streamm.nrel.gov.

Once a candidate molecule, or oligomer, has been generated, the geometry is locally optimized using density functional theory (DFT) and the excited states are computed using time-dependent DFT (TDDFT). All calculations were performed with the Gaussian09 electronic structure program, revisions B.01, C.01 and D.01.1 A variety of exchange-correlation functionals and basis sets have been used but the most common combination is the B3LYP hybrid functional with a 6-31g(d) basis set.

To predict the properties of polymers, we have computed the electronic structure for monomers, dimers and (optionally) tetramers (n=1, 2, 4) and applied the extrapolation procedure described by Larsen.2

Functionalized building blocks are combined into materials according to different backbone motifs. Following convention, different building blocks are denoted as donors (D) or acceptors (A) according to whether they are electron rich or electron deficient, respectively. Backbone repeat motifs included here are the alternating structures shown at right: (D-A)n, (D-A-D)n, (D-D’)n, (A-A’)n. In all cases additional spacer (sp) molecules can be included, leading to repeat units such as: (D-sp-A-sp)n. We also have computed small molecule structures capped by terminal (T) building blocks based on a T-core-T architecture, where the core can have a variety of alternating donor/acceptor patterns, as shown schematically at right. The bottom-most figure at right shows examples of polymer structures in the database extrapolated from calculations on oligomers.

Selected references and publications

  1. Gaussian 09, (Revisions B.01, C.01 and D.01), M. J. Frisch, et al., Gaussian, Inc., Wallingford CT, 2009. See gaussian.com
  2. Ross E. Larsen, J. Phys. Chem. C, 120, 9650-9660 (2016). DOI: 10.1021/acs .jpcc.6b02138

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC36-08-GO28308 with the National Renewable Energy Laboratory through the DOE SETP program. The research was performed using high performance computing resources sponsored by the Department of Energy’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, located at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

Contributors

Ross Larsen, Dana Olson, Nikos Kopidakis, Zbyslaw Owczarczyk , Scott Hammond, Peter Graf, Travis Kemper, Scott Sides, Kristin Munch, David Evenson, Craig Swank

Schematic OPV device
Schematic OPV device

Materials whose properties are predicted in this database may be candidates for the absorber layer or for junction former materials.

Schematic illustration of backbone types
Building Blocks

(D, A, sp) with optional functional groups added (top row) and available backbone motifs (below).

Small Molecule Architectures
Building Blocks

Schematic illustration of small molecule architectures contained in this database.

Examples of structures in the database
Structures
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