4.8 Article

Design of Injection and Recombination in Quantum Dot Sensitized Solar Cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 132, Issue 19, Pages 6834-6839

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja101752d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion of Spain [HOPE CSD2007-00007, JES-NANOSOLAR PLE2009-0042, MAT2007-62982]
  2. Generalitat Valenciana [ACOMP/2009/095, PROMETEO/2009/058]

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Semiconductor Quantum Dots (QDs) currently receive widespread attention for the development of photovoltaic devices due to the possibility of tailoring their optoelectronic properties by the control of size and composition. Here we show that it is possible to design both injection and recombination in QD sensitized solar cells (QDSCs) by the appropriate use of molecular dipoles and conformal coatings. QDSCs have been manufactured using mesoporous TiO2 electrodes coated with in situ grown CdSe semiconductor nanocrystals by chemical bath deposition (CBD). Surface modification of the CdSe sensitized electrodes by conformal ZnS coating and grafting of molecular dipoles (DT) has been explored to both increase the injection from QDs into the TiO2 matrix and reduce the recombination of the QD sensitized electrodes. Different sequences of both treatments have been tested aiming at boosting the energy conversion efficiency of the devices. The obtained results showed that the most favorable sequence of the surface treatment (DT+ZnS) led to a dramatic 600% increase of photovoltaic performance compared to the reference electrode (without modification): V-oc = 0.488 V, j(sc) = 9.74 mA/cm(2), FF = 0.34, and efficiency = 1.60% under full 1 sun illumination. The measured photovoltaic performance was correlated to the relative position of the CdSe conduction band (characterized by surface photovoltage measurements) and TiO2 conduction band (characterized by the chemical capacitance, C-mu) together with recombination resistance, R-rec.

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