Fullerene-based indoor OPVs, particularly phenyl-C61 butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM), has been regarded as a prospective harvesting indoor light energy source to drive low-power consumption electronic devices such as sensors and IoTs. Due to the low tunability of its inherently spherical structure, the performance of the fullerene-based indoor OPVs seem to hit a bottleneck compared with the non-fullerene materials. Here, we explore the potential application of fullerene derivative bis-PCBM in indoor OPVs, which owns a higher the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) level than PCBM. The results show that when blended with PCDTBT, bis-PCBM devices yield a high VOC of up to 1.05 V and 0.9 V under AM 1.5G illumination and 1000 lx indoor light, compared with the corresponding values of 0.93 V and 0.79 V for PCBM devices. Nevertheless, the disorders in bis-PCBM suppress the JSC and FF and, therefore, result in a lower efficiency compared to PCBM devices. However, the efficiency and stability differences between the two kinds of cells were much reduced under indoor light conditions. After further optimization of the material composition and fabrication process, bis-PCBM could be an alternative to PCBM, offering great potential for indoor OPV with high performance.
Keywords: fullerene derivatives; indoor photovoltaics; internet of things; open-circuit voltage.