2008 APS March Meeting
Volume 53, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 10–14, 2008;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session L2: The Physics of Next Generation Photovoltaics
2:30 PM–4:54 PM,
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Morial Convention Center
Room: LaLouisiane C
Sponsoring
Units:
DCMP DMP
Chair: Arthur Nozik, National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.MAR.L2.4
Abstract: L2.00004 : Dye-Sensitized Approaches to Photovoltaics
4:18 PM–4:54 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Michael Gr\"atzel
(Ecole Polytechnique F\'ed\'erale de Lausanne)
Sensitization of wide band-gap semiconductors to photons of
energy less than
the band-gap is a key step in two technically important processes -
panchromatic photography and photoelectrochemical solar cells. In
both cases
the photosensitive species is not the semiconductor - silver
halide or metal
oxide - but rather an electrochemically active dye. The gap
between the
highest occupied molecular level (HOMO) and the lowest unoccupied
molecular
level (LUMO) is less than the band-gap of the semiconductor with
which it is
associated. It can therefore absorb light of a wavelength longer
than that
to which the semiconductor itself is sensitive. The
electrochemical process
is initiated when the dye molecule relaxes from its photoexcited
level by
electron injection into the semiconductor, which therefore acts as a
photoanode. If the dye is in contact with a redox electrolyte,
the negative
charge represented by the lost electron can be recovered from the
reduced
state of the redox system, which in return is regenerated by
charge transfer
from a cathode. An external load completes the electrical
circuit. The
system therefore represents a conversion of the energy of
absorbed photons
into an electrical current by a regenerative device in every
functional
respect analogous to a solid-state photovoltaic cell.
As in any engineering system, choice of materials, their
optimization and
their synergy are essential to efficient operation. While a
semiconductor-electrolyte contact is analogous to a Schottky
contact, in
that a barrier is established between two materials of different
conduction
mechanism, with the possibility of optical absorption, charge
carrier pair
generation and separation, it should be remembered that the
photogenerated
valence band hole in the semiconductor represents a powerful
oxidizing
agent. Given that the band-gap is related to the strength and
therefore the
stability of chemical bonding within the semiconductor, for
narrow-gap
materials the most likely reaction of such a hole is the
photocorrosion of
the semiconductor itself. However, only relatively narrow
band-gap materials
have an effective optical absorption through the visible
spectrum, towards
and into the infra-red. Materials with an optimal band-gap match
to the
solar spectrum, of the order of 1.5eV, are therefore
electrochemically
unstable. A stable photoelectrochemical cell, without some
process of
optical sensitization, and necessarily using a wide-gap
semiconductor is
sensitive only to the ultra-violet limit of the visible spectrum.
Over
recent years a suitable combination of semiconductor and
sensitizer has been
identified and optimized, so that now a solar spectrum conversion
efficiency
of over 11{\%} has been verified in a sensitized
photoelectrochemical
device.
One key to such an efficient system is the suppression of
recombination
losses. When the excited dye relaxes by electron loss, the
separated charge
carriers find themselves on opposite sides of a phase barrier -- the
electron within the solid-state semiconductor, the positive charge
externally, in association with the dye molecule. There is no
valence---band
involvement in the process, so the system represents a
majority-carrier
device, avoiding one of the major loss mechanisms in conventional
photovoltaics. In consequence also a highly-disordered, even porous,
semiconductor structure is acceptable, enabling surface
adsorption of a
sufficient concentration of the dye to permit total optical
absorption of
incident light of photon energy greater than the HOMO-LUMO gap of
the dye
molecule. The accepted wide-band semiconductor for
photoelectrochemical
applications is titanium dioxide in the anatase crystal
structure. The size
of the nanocrystals making up the semiconductor photoanode can be
determined
by hydrothermal processing of a precursor sol, and the film can
be deposited
on a transparent conducting oxide (TCO) substrate by any convenient
thin-film process such as screen printing or tape casting.
The preferred dye system is inspired by the natural processes
involving
chlorophyll, the coloring material in plants on which all earthly
life
depends. Chlorophyll is an organometallic dye, with a metal ion,
Mg, within
a porphyrin cage of nitrogen atoms. The synthetic chemist of
course can
select any convenient metal within the periodic table, and
experience shows
that ruthenium has the optimal properties expected. A
ruthenium-pyridyl
complex provides the chromophore of the dye, with the HOMO-LUMO
gap, and
thence the absorption spectrum bring modified by substitution with
thiocyanide groups. Chemisorptive attachment of the dye to the
metal oxide
surface is obtained by carboxyl groups attached to the pyridyl
components.
The energetics of the dye is such that the LUMO level is just
above the
conduction band edge of the semiconductor, enabling relaxation by
electron
injection as required. A satisfactory electroactive dye
structure, with good
attachment properties and a wide optical absorption spectrum is
therefore a
sophisticated molecular engineering product.
The electrolyte is also an optimized electrochemical system. The
basic redox
behavior is provided by the iodine/iodide system, with the
advantage that
the ions, both oxidized and reduced are relatively small, and
therefore
mobile in the supporting electrolyte. Energy losses due to slow
diffusion
are minimized. Early experiments used aqueous electrolytes,
though with
limited cell lifetime due to hydrolysis of the chemisorptive
dye---semiconductor bond. A wide range of organic systems were
therefore
investigated, with the present favored formulation being based on
imidazole
salts. These have the additional advantage of low vapor pressure,
very
necessary as the photoactive sites under mid---day sun
illumination may
reach 80\r{ }C or higher.
Low losses at the cathode counterelectrode are also a requirement
for cell
efficiency. The cathode is not necessarily transparent, and
prototype cells
on thin metal foils have been produced. However a TCO on glass or
polymer
counterelectrode is widely used. In either case suitable
electrocatalytic
behavior is required and frequently a nanodispersed Pt
precipitated from
haxachloride solution is employed.
It is by now evident that the achievement of an
industrially-competitive
sensitized photoelectrochemical solar cell is the result of the
optimization
of several components, associated obviously with their effective
synergy.
Each change of a single component has repercussions on the choice
and
performance of others. However as already mentioned an efficiency
of over
11{\%} has now been certified, and a stability of over 14,000
hours under
accelerated testing with continuous simulated AM1.5 illumination was
recently reported. In consequence there is increasing confidence
on the part
of industry. Several licensees of EPFL patents on dye---sensitized
photovoltaic systems are now preparing for large-scale
production. G24
Innovations PLC in Wales is commissioning a manufacturing plant,
and Dyesol
PLC in Australia is making available the required materials on an
industrial
scale.
In conclusion, then, it can be stated that the DSC system is much
more than
a fascinating scientific artifact illustrating charge-transfer
mechanisms at
electrochemical interfaces; an efficiency and reliability with
industrial
credibility have been demonstrated and verified, and a
significant role in
competition with other photosystems can be foreseen.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.MAR.L2.4