Abstract

In view of the limited ruthenium resource, metal-free organic dyes may play a prominent role in the coming large-scale application of cost-effective dye-sensitized solar cells, if their efficiency and stability can be considerably improved. In this paper we utilized a binary π-conjugated spacer of ethylenedioxythiophene and dithienosilole to construct a high molar absorption coefficient push−pull dye, characteristic of an intramolecular charge-transfer band peaking at 584 nm measured in chloroform. In comparison with the standard ruthenium sensitizer Z907, this metal-free chromophore C219 endowed a nanocrystalline titania film with an evident light-harvesting enhancement, leading to an unprecedented 10.0−10.3% efficiency at the AM1.5G conditions for dye-sensitized solar cells with nonruthenium dyestuffs, although a highly volatile electrolyte was used. Transient absorption measurements have revealed that even if the kinetics of back-electron transfer and dye regeneration are considerably different for Z907 and C219, the branching ratios of these two charge-transfer channels are over 35 for both dyes, ensuring a high yield of net charge separation at the titania/dye/electrolyte interface. A solvent-free ionic liquid cell with C219 as the sensitizer exhibited an impressive efficiency of 8.9% under a low light intensity of 14.39 mW cm−2, making it very favorable for the indoor application of flexible dye-sensitized solar cells.

Keywords

Dye-sensitized solar cellRutheniumMaterials scienceElectrolyteConjugated systemPhotochemistryPhotosensitizerSolar cellMolar absorptivityChromophoreOrganic solar cellEnergy conversion efficiencyChemical engineeringChemistryElectrodeOptoelectronicsOrganic chemistryPolymerOpticsPhysical chemistry

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Publication Info

Year
2010
Type
article
Volume
22
Issue
5
Pages
1915-1925
Citations
956
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Wangdong Zeng, Yiming Cao, Yu Bai et al. (2010). Efficient Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells with an Organic Photosensitizer Featuring Orderly Conjugated Ethylenedioxythiophene and Dithienosilole Blocks. Chemistry of Materials , 22 (5) , 1915-1925. https://doi.org/10.1021/cm9036988

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/cm9036988