Abstract

All dyes conduct but at different degrees of absorption; it is interesting to study the degree of conductivity and absorptivity of novel reactive azo-dyes in respect to dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) to ascertain their viability for such applications. In this study, four novel reactive azo-dyes were experimentally synthesized from p-aminobenzaldehyde, 4-amino-3-nitrobenzaldehyde, and aniline through series of condensation and coupling reactions. The various functional groups, molecular connectivities, and molecular weight of the various fragments of the synthesized dyes were elucidated using the GC-MS, FT-IR, UV-vis, and NMR respectively. The experimentally determined structures were modeled and investigated using density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) approaches to computationally compute the electronic structure properties, reactivity, absorption and solvatochromism in four different phases: gas, ethanol, acetone, and water, and the photovoltaic properties for possible applications in dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs). By comparing the HOMO (EH) and the LUMO (EL) energies from the results obtained demonstrates that dye D has the highest EL energy value of −2.48 eV with a relatively lowest EH energy value of −5.63 eV such that it lies underneath the conduction band edge of TiO2 which is necessary to enable charge regeneration. Pi-electron delocalization was observed from the natural bond orbital (NBO) calculations between the different aromatic rings with dye B and A having the relatively highest and least second-order stabilization energies between σ* → σ* and LP* → LP interacting orbitals respectively. It is also observed in all the solvents that the Gibbs free energy of injection (ΔGinject) is greater than 0.2 eV and hence, all the studied azo structures in the four phases provided efficient electron injection and light harvesting efficiency (LHE), however, the value of ΔGinject for dyes B and D is greatest in all the four phases and thus, provided the highest electron injection of all the dyes. From the fact-findings of quantum theory of atoms-in-molecules (QTAIM), dyes A and C have extra-stability due to their relatively high numbers of intramolecular H-bond interactions along with some additional intra-atomic bonding between atoms within the studied compounds. Hence, all the four dyes are good for DSSCs applications.

Highlights

  • Extensive research and continuous experiments have shown that dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) havePaper integration.[8,9,10,11] Many other future advantages of DSSC are yet to be harnessed which include: coloring, transparency and increases in power density.[9]

  • The carbonyl (C]O) peak was observed at 1639.55 cmÀ1 due to the aldehyde group, SO3H peak at 638.46 cmÀ1, N]N stretching at 1483.31 cmÀ1 due to azo group, C–H stretch at 2782.41 cmÀ1, the presence of cyanuric chloride is responsible for C–N and C– Cl peaks respectively at 1174.69 cmÀ1, and 542.02 cmÀ1

  • The experimentally synthesized structures were further computationally modeled by means of rst principle density functional theory at the B3LYP/6-31+(d,p) method to investigate the ground state electronic structural properties, reactivities, and bonding nature

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Summary

Introduction

Paper integration.[8,9,10,11] Many other future advantages of DSSC are yet to be harnessed which include: coloring, transparency and increases in power density.[9]. It will be interesting to study the degree of conductivity of our novel dyes in respect to solar voltaic cells to ascertain their viability to such application The choice of these four dyes is because of their high absorption property to light which is due to their reactive moiety and high molar extinction coefficient which ranges between 1.2 Â 104 to 7.6 Â 104 L molÀ1 cmÀ1 as recently reported by Odey and coworkers.[12] the synthesis, characterization through spectroscopic investigations (FT-IR, UV/vis, and NMR), DFT, and TD-DFT studies of the photovoltaic performances which includes: short circuit current density (JSC), light harvesting efficiency (LHE), charge injection efficiency, injection driving force, oxidation potential of the dye at excited and ground states, dye regeneration energy, open circuit voltage (VOC), and reorganization energy parameters along with detail frontier molecular orbital, natural bond orbital, global reactivity descriptors, density of states, absorption and solvatochromism for the investigation of the HOMO–LUMO energies, second order perturbation energies, structure reactivity, contributions of molecular orbitals, the response to light of the different structures in different phases of media respectively and potential energy distribution analysis (VEDA) of four novel reactive azo dyes were presented

Experimental
Puri cation of dyes
Computational details
Structural analysis
Hole–electron analysis
Photovoltaic properties
Conclusion

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