Probing and enhancing charge generation and transport in solid-state dye-sensitized solar cells
Lead Research Organisation:
UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
Department Name: Oxford Physics
Abstract
Photovoltaic devices that harvest the energy provided by the sun have great potential as clean, renewable sources of electricity. Despite this, uptake of photovoltaic energy generation has not been strong, largely because devices based on many current technologies are still too expensive. One promising alternative is given by organic-inorganic hybrid cells based on dye-sensitised metal oxide mesoporous electrodes, which are cheaper to produce and have reached power conversion efficiencies of over 11%. However, there remain concerns about the incorporated redox active liquid electrolyte, presenting the possibility of toxic, corrosive chemicals leakage. Recent research into replacing the liquid electrolyte with a solid-state hole-transporter has yielded cells with up to 5% power conversion efficiency. Here we propose a structured research programme that will lead to increases in the power conversion efficiencies of all-solid-state dye-sensitized solar cells (SDSCs) towards that of their electrolyte-containing counterparts. In particular, we will use a new approach in order to establish criteria for optimization of essential parameters such as the nanoscale morphology of the electrodes, the charge-mobility for the hole-transporter and the energetic level arrangement at the interface. The study will combine device measurements with a range of time-resolved spectroscopic investigations to deduce how each change to the system affects individual photophysical processes (such as photo-excited electron transfer) in the material, and how this translates into efficiency of device operation. Work will be based on a careful selection of material components that allow tuning of only one particular property at a time. This combined new approach will not only allow significant improvements to be made to specific SDSC designs, but also deliver a more general framework for the exact requirements of successful optimization approaches.
Publications

Brown M
(2011)
Surface Energy Relay Between Cosensitized Molecules in Solid-State Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells
in The Journal of Physical Chemistry C

Johnston MB
(2016)
Hybrid Perovskites for Photovoltaics: Charge-Carrier Recombination, Diffusion, and Radiative Efficiencies.
in Accounts of chemical research

Raavi S
(2014)
Impact of Molecular Charge-Transfer States on Photocurrent Generation in Solid State Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells Employing Low-Band-Gap Dyes
in The Journal of Physical Chemistry C

Stranks SD
(2012)
Nanoengineering coaxial carbon nanotube-dual-polymer heterostructures.
in ACS nano

Stranks SD
(2011)
Ultrafast charge separation at a polymer-single-walled carbon nanotube molecular junction.
in Nano letters

Stranks SD
(2013)
Electron-hole diffusion lengths exceeding 1 micrometer in an organometal trihalide perovskite absorber.
in Science (New York, N.Y.)

Tiwana P
(2012)
The origin of an efficiency improving "light soaking" effect in SnO2 based solid-state dye-sensitized solar cells
in Energy & Environmental Science


Weisspfennig C
(2013)
Dependence of Dye Regeneration and Charge Collection on the Pore-Filling Fraction in Solid-State Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells
in Advanced Functional Materials

Weisspfennig C
(2013)
Optimizing the Energy Offset between Dye and Hole-Transporting Material in Solid-State Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells
in The Journal of Physical Chemistry C
Description | I had already uploaded these, but now they seem to have disappeared. |
Exploitation Route | I had already uploaded these, but now they seem to have disappeared. |
Sectors | Chemicals Electronics Energy Manufacturing including Industrial Biotechology |