Abstract

AbstractScreen‐printing is a commonly used method for the preparation of photoelectrodes. Although previous studies have explored the effect of the number of printed layers on the efficiency of dye‐sensitized solar cells, its interplay with the photoelectrocatalytic properties of the electrodes has rarely been examined. This study focuses on this issue by studying the photoelectrocatalytic oxidation of methanol over TiO2 electrodes. Incident photon‐to‐current efficiencies reached 87 % at the optimal conditions of monochromatic (338 nm) irradiation of one‐layer films at 0.2 V vs NHE. However, the irradiation wavelength and applied bias strongly influenced the relative behavior of the films. For instance, at 0.5 V and 327 nm irradiation, the one‐layer electrode was 6 times more efficient than the four‐layer one, while at 385 nm the four‐layer electrode was 3.5 times more efficient. The results were explained on the basis of differing light absorption properties and charge carrier lifetimes. Modelling and quantification of the electron diffusion length (5.7 μm) helped to explain why the two‐layer electrode (4.89 μm thick) showed the most consistent efficiencies across all conditions. Complementarily, transient absorption spectroscopy was used to correlate the thicknesses with charge carrier lifetimes. Electron transfer to FTO was apparent only for the thinner electrode. Our work shows that the optimization of photoelectrocatalytic processes should include the number of layers as a key variable.

Highlights

  • Incident photon-to-current efficiencies reached 87 % at the optimal conditions of monochromatic (338 nm) irradiation of one-layer films at 0.2 V vs Normal Hydrogen Electrode (NHE)

  • The method has been widely applied for the preparation of electrodes for dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs).[22,23,24]

  • We determined the thicknesses of the films via Atomic force microscopy (AFM) measurements (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Incident photon-to-current efficiencies reached 87 % at the optimal conditions of monochromatic (338 nm) irradiation of one-layer films at 0.2 V vs NHE. Modelling and quantification of the electron diffusion length (5.7 μm) helped to explain why the two-layer electrode (4.89 μm thick) showed the most consistent efficiencies across all conditions. The method has been widely applied for the preparation of electrodes for dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs).[22,23,24] One topic investigated within the research of DSSCs is the effect of the number of screen-printed layers on the efficiency of the devices. Two different behaviors are reported for the efficiencies of DSSCs as a function of the number of layers. Concerning the photoelectrochemical activity of bare TiO2 electrodes, there are only a few reports investigating the effect of the number of screen-printed layers. Gimenez et al.[29] observed for screen-printed electrodes with

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