Transparent Near‐IR Dye‐Sensitized Solar Cells: Ultrafast Spectroscopy Reveals the Effects of Driving Force and Dye Aggregation

Author:

Kurucz Mate1,Nikolinakos Ilias1,Soueiti Jimmy1,Baron Thibaut2,Grifoni Fionnuala3,Naim Waad34,Pellegrin Yann2,Sauvage Frédéric3,Odobel Fabrice2ORCID,Haacke Stefan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institut de Physique et Chimie des Matériaux (IPCMS) University of Strasbourg – CNRS 23, Rue du Loess 67034 Strasbourg France

2. Nantes Université – CNRS, CEISAM, UMR 6230 44000 Nantes France

3. Laboratoire de Réactivité et Chimie des Solides Hub de l'énergie Université de Picardie Jules Verne – CNRS 15 Rue Baudelocque 80000 Amiens France

4. Present affiliation: Dept. Chem. Eng.& Mat. Sc. Michigan State University East Lansing USA

Abstract

AbstractIn the context of developing transparent near‐IR absorbing dye‐sensitized solar cells, diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP) cyanine dyes have recently emerged as an alternative to strongly aggregating linear cyanines. In our efforts to increase both the power conversion efficiency (PCE) and the average visible transmittance (AVT), a thienylated version, called TB202, that shows a red‐shifted absorption with respect to our champion dye TB207 was designed. However, the lower energy LUMO level of TB202 brings along a lower driving force (−ΔG) for carrier injection, which we recently identified as the main parameter limiting the PCE to 1.5 % in the best device conditions. In the present paper, we publish a detailed account of the effect of the de‐aggregating cheno‐deoxycholic acid (CDCA) for both TB207 and TB202. Both transient absorption (TAS) and fluorescence up‐conversion (FLUPS) data are presented, which allow to quantitively compare the effect of −ΔG and the CDCA concentration, in terms of the kinetic competition of ensemble averaged carrier injection and monomer‐to‐aggregate energy transfer (ET) rates. A comprehensive picture emerges on how ET is reduced by higher CDCA concentrations, leading in the best device conditions to injection efficiencies in the range of 65 % for TB207 and only 35 % for TB202.

Publisher

Wiley

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