Abstract

Solid‐state dye‐sensitized solar cells rely on effective infiltration of a solid‐state hole‐transporting material into the pores of a nanoporous TiO2 network to allow for dye regeneration and hole extraction. Using microsecond transient absorption spectroscopy and femtosecond photoluminescence upconversion spectroscopy, the hole‐transfer yield from the dye to the hole‐transporting material 2,2′,7,7′‐tetrakis(N,N‐di‐p‐methoxyphenylamine)‐9,9'‐spirobifluorene (spiro‐OMeTAD) is shown to rise rapidly with higher pore‐filling fractions as the dye‐coated pore surface is increasingly covered with hole‐transporting material. Once a pore‐filling fraction of ≈30% is reached, further increases do not significantly change the hole‐transfer yield. Using simple models of infiltration of spiro‐OMeTAD into the TiO2 porous network, it is shown that this pore‐filling fraction is less than the amount required to cover the dye surface with at least a single layer of hole‐transporting material, suggesting that charge diffusion through the dye monolayer network precedes transfer to the hole‐transporting material. Comparison of these results with device parameters shows that improvements of the power‐conversion efficiency beyond ≈30% pore filling are not caused by a higher hole‐transfer yield, but by a higher charge‐collection efficiency, which is found to occur in steps. The observed sharp onsets in photocurrent and power‐conversion efficiencies with increasing pore‐filling fraction correlate well with percolation theory, predicting the points of cohesive pathway formation in successive spiro‐OMeTAD layers adhered to the pore walls. From percolation theory it is predicted that, for standard mesoporous TiO2 with 20 nm pore size, the photocurrent should show no further improvement beyond an ≈83% pore‐filling fraction.

Highlights

  • Dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) offer a promising route towards production of cost-effective photovoltaic systems with solid-state DSSCs show optimized performance at relatively low layer thickness of only ≈2 μm, which limits light harvesting efficiencies.[9]

  • We present here a complementary spectroscopic and device investigation into the effect of pore-filling fraction on solid-state DSSCs incorporating a TiO2 mesoporous electrode sensitized with a Ruthenium dye, and spiro-OMeTAD as the hole-transporting material (HTM)

  • We find that the hole-transfer yield improves rapidly with increasing pore-filling fraction (PFF) and reaches a maximum at a value of only ≈30%, in agreement with hole diffusion within the dye network preceding hole transfer to the HTM

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Summary

Introduction

Dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) offer a promising route towards production of cost-effective photovoltaic systems with solid-state DSSCs show optimized performance at relatively low layer thickness of only ≈2 μm, which limits light harvesting efficiencies.[9] It has been proposed that crucial limitations to layer thicknesses are the intrinsically low mobility of spiro-.

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