4.5 Article

Electron tunneling at the TiO2/substrate interface can determine dye-sensitized solar cell performance

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 108, Issue 46, Pages 17946-17951

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp047686s

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The electric potential distribution in dye-sensitized solar cells plays a major role in the operation of such cells. Models based on a built-in electric field which sets the upper limit for the open circuit voltage (V-oc) and/or the possibility of a Schottky barrier at the interface between the mesoporous wide band gap semiconductor and the transparent conducting substrate have been presented. We show that I-V characteristics in the dark and upon illumination are very well explained by electron tunneling, rather than transport over a Schottky barrier, at this interface. Our calculations, based on tunnel currents, show that a discontinuity of the conduction band at the TiO2/FTO interface, rather than a built-in electric field, suffices for efficient electron transfer through this interface, and, thus, for efficient operation of this type of solar cell. Clearly, this will hold only if the photoinduced electrostatic potential barrier between the transparent conducting substrate and the mesoporous wide band gap semiconductor drops over a region that is sufficiently narrow to allow efficient tunneling through it.

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