Chem. vapor deposition (CVD) at atm. pressure, using TiCl4 as a precursor, was used to grow nanostructured TiO2 films on glass substrates. At relatively low temps. (∼245 °C) and using relatively high reactant concns., different nano-morphologies of TiO2 were formed simultaneously, such as spheres, nanowires and mesoporous structures. The TiO2 spheres were successfully applied as light-scattering particles in dye-sensitized solar cells, either by direct deposition onto electrodes in the reactor, or by prepn. of a printing paste from the deposited particles. For dye-sensitized solar cells using the org. dye D35 as sensitizer and a cobalt-complex based redox electrolyte, a solar cell efficiency of 4.4% was obtained using a 5 μm transparent mesoporous TiO2 layer. Addn. of a 5 μm light-scattering CVD-particle film increased the efficiency by 22% to 5.4%, which was similar to the result obtained with an equally thick com. available light-scattering film (5.3%). Longer electron lifetime was found using CVD-based films, which is attributed to the presence of more traps in the bulk of the material.
Christian Michael Wolff, Austin George Kuba, Alexander Wieczorek
Kevin Sivula, Jun Ho Yum, Rebekah Anne Wells, Simon Nussbaum, Marina Caroline Michèle Caretti, Benjamin Goldman, Loï Charles Carbone, Linda Lazouni, Emeline Cécile Rideau, Elizaveta Potapova Mensi, Hannah Elizabeth Johnson