4.8 Article

Dye-sensitized solar cells based on Fe N-heterocyclic carbene photosensitizers with improved rod-like push-pull functionality

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue 48, Pages 16035-16053

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1sc02963k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research (SSF) Foundation
  2. Knut and Alice Wallenberg (KAW) Foundation
  3. Swedish Research Council (VR)
  4. Swedish Energy Agency (Energimyndigheten)
  5. LMK Foundation
  6. Carl Trygger Foundation
  7. Sten K Johnson Foundation
  8. eSSENCE
  9. computing centre LUNARC
  10. computing centre NSC through SNIC
  11. STandUP for Energy program
  12. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation within the Feodor-Lynen Fellowship program

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The study successfully improved the power conversion efficiency of dye-sensitized solar cells by designing and synthesizing new photosensitizers. Prototype DSSCs using the new Fe NHC photosensitizers showed promising results, with the addition of a co-sensitizer aiding in efficiency improvement.
A new generation of octahedral iron(ii)-N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) complexes, employing different tridentate C<^>N<^>C ligands, has been designed and synthesized as earth-abundant photosensitizers for dye sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) and related solar energy conversion applications. This work introduces a linearly aligned push-pull design principle that reaches from the ligand having nitrogen-based electron donors, over the Fe(ii) centre, to the ligand having an electron withdrawing carboxylic acid anchor group. A combination of spectroscopy, electrochemistry, and quantum chemical calculations demonstrate the improved molecular excited state properties in terms of a broader absorption spectrum compared to the reference complex, as well as directional charge-transfer displacement of the lowest excited state towards the semiconductor substrate in accordance with the push-pull design. Prototype DSSCs based on one of the new Fe NHC photosensitizers demonstrate a power conversion efficiency exceeding 1% already for a basic DSSC set-up using only the I-/I-3(-) redox mediator and standard operating conditions, outcompeting the corresponding DSSC based on the homoleptic reference complex. Transient photovoltage measurements confirmed that adding the co-sensitizer chenodeoxycholic acid helped in improving the efficiency by increasing the electron lifetime in TiO2. Time-resolved spectroscopy revealed spectral signatures for successful ultrafast (<100 fs) interfacial electron injection from the heteroleptic dyes to TiO2. However, an ultrafast recombination process results in undesirable fast charge recombination from TiO2 back to the oxidized dye, leaving only 5-10% of the initially excited dyes available to contribute to a current in the DSSC. On slower timescales, time-resolved spectroscopy also found that the recombination dynamics (longer than 40 mu s) were significantly slower than the regeneration of the oxidized dye by the redox mediator (6-8 mu s). Therefore it is the ultrafast recombination down to fs-timescales, between the oxidized dye and the injected electron, that remains as one of the main bottlenecks to be targeted for achieving further improved solar energy conversion efficiencies in future work.

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