Dye-sensitized solar cells (DSC), introduced by O'Regan and Grätzel in 1991, are a low cost alternative to conventional silicon photovoltaic cells, the latter requiring extremely pure starting materials and sophisticated production procedures. DSC's, based on an inorganic wide band-gap semiconductor (TiO2) coated by a ruthenium polypyridyl complex as dye, have been studied and improved over the last decade and have reached a considerable solar to electric conversion efficiency of 11 % over the standard air mass (AM) 1.5 spectrum (100 mWcm-2). Traditionally, a liquid electrolyte redox system is used to regenerate the photo-excitated dye and carry current through the cell. Practical advantages have been gained by replacing the liquid electrolyte with an organic solid hole-transporting material (HTM). These type of cells exhibit a record efficiency of 4 % with 2,2',7,7'-tetrakis-(N,N-di-p-methoxyphenylamine)-9,9'-spirobifluorene (Spiro-OMeTAD) as the HTM. Clearly this lags behind the performance features of liquid electrolyte dye-sensitized solar cells, as the research of the solid-state solar cells (SSD) is still in its infancy. The objective of the present work is to study the SSD performance limitations emerging from the cells and to find strategies for addressing these problems. Interfacial charge recombination is a significant loss mechanism in DSC. This is particularly true for solid-state devices, as the solid HTM is less efficient in screening the internal fields, which assist recombination. The primary, one electron-process, charge recombination occurs between injected electrons in the TiO2 and holes in the oxidized HTM. In this work, a strategy is developed to minimize interfacial charge recombination by using guanidinium carboxylic acid molecules as co-adsorbents to the dye molecules on the TiO2 nanocrystals. The charge-recombination rate of the injected electrons in the TiO2 with the holes in the HTM was retarded by an order of magnitude. The open-circuit voltage was also significantly improved by 14%. We attribute these effects to be due to a "space-filling" on the TiO2 surface and "columbic-screening" of the electrons in the TiO2 from the holes in the HTM. The dipolar nature of the co-adsorbent molecules is also likely to contribute to improvements in open-circuit voltage by further offsetting the energy levels between the n-type semiconductor and the HTM. In order to decrease the recombination of electrons, from the semiconductor, with holes in the HTM, the hole concentration must be reduced. For this reason, new hole-conductors, based on triphenyldiamine, with high hole-mobility have been investigated, avoiding the high degree of oxidation otherwise required in the standard HTM (less hole concentration). The 1,3,5-tris(N-(1-naphtyl)-N-[4-(1-naphthylphenylamino)-phenyl]-amino)-benzene (TTADB), having a very high hole-mobility, exhibits an extremely large open-circuit voltage on flat TiO2 films compared to the Spiro (30% higher). The 4
Michael Graetzel, Shaik Mohammed Zakeeruddin, Felix Thomas Eickemeyer, Peng Wang, Ming Ren
Michael Graetzel, Jacques-Edouard Moser, Kai Zhu, Etienne Christophe Socie, George Cameron Fish, Aaron Tomas Terpstra