A novel conjugated copolymer (PITN-co-ThBTD) composed of alternating isothianaphthene, thiophene, and benzothiadiazole units was synthesized and characterized. The polymer has a low bandgap of 1.55 eV as a result of the intrachain Coupling between electron-donating/withdrawing units. Thermal analysis and wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS) reveal that the polymer has a largely amorphous structure. Blends of PITN-co-ThBTD with the electron acceptor methanofullerene [6,6]-phenyl C-61-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM) were Studied as a function of increasing PCBM content by WAXS, atomic force microscopy, charge transport, and photovoltaic measurements. The PCBM Solubility limit, i.e., the phase-separation point, was estimated to be 30 wt % PCBM, beyond which charge carrier transport switches from hole only to ambipolar (both electron and hole) in a field-effect transistor testbed. Bulk heterojunction solar cells were constructed from PITN-co-ThBTD films blended with varying weight fractions of PCBM. The best performance was observed at high PCBM compositions (similar to 70-80% PCBM) rather than at the phase separation point. The power conversion efficiency of 0.9% with short circuit current J(sc) = 3.4 mA/cm(2), open circuit voltage, V-oc = 0.83 V, and fill factor, FF = 32%, was measured under AM 1.5, 100 mW/cm(2) illumination. The high V-oc is a promising result for low bandgap polymer-based photovoltaics, while the low FF is a performance-limiting factor originating from the disordered Structure Of the polymer and the thickness of the film (100 nm).