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Estimating the Maximum Attainable Efficiency in Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells

✍ Scribed by Henry J. Snaith


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
456 KB
Volume
20
Category
Article
ISSN
1616-301X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

For an ideal solar cell, a maximum solar‐to‐electrical power conversion efficiency of just over 30% is achievable by harvesting UV to near IR photons up to 1.1 eV. Dye‐sensitized solar cells (DSCs) are, however, not ideal. Here, the electrical and optical losses in the dye‐sensitized system are reviewed, and the main losses in potential from the conversion of an absorbed photon at the optical bandgap of the sensitizer to the open‐circuit voltage generated by the solar cell are specifically highlighted. In the first instance, the maximum power conversion efficiency attainable as a function of optical bandgap of the sensitizer and the “loss‐in‐potential” from the optical bandgap to the open‐circuit voltage is estimated. For the best performing DSCs with current technology, the loss‐in‐potential is ∼0.75 eV, which leads to a maximum power‐conversion efficiency of 13.4% with an optical bandgap of 1.48 eV (840 nm absorption onset). Means by which the loss‐in‐potential could be reduced to 0.4 eV are discussed; a maximum efficiency of 20.25% with an optical bandgap of 1.31 eV (940 nm) is possible if this is achieved.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Calculation of the maximum attainable ef
✍ Alexis De Vos 📂 Article 📅 1976 🏛 Elsevier Science ⚖ 740 KB

A~traet--Starting from a heterogeneous semiconductor junction, with an ideal diode characteristic, the maximum attainable efficiency t/is calculated for the conversion of solar energy into electric energy. It is calculated as a function of the two semiconductor band gaps, Eot and Eg2, and of two ma