Examining architectures of photoanode–photovoltaic tandem cells for solar water splitting
J Brillet, M Cornuz, F Le Formal, JH Yum… - Journal of Materials …, 2010 - cambridge.org
Journal of Materials Research, 2010•cambridge.org
Given the limitations of the materials available for photoelectrochemical water splitting, a
multiphoton (tandem) approach is required to convert solar energy into hydrogen efficiently
and durably. Here we investigate a promising system consisting of a hematite photoanode in
combination with dye-sensitized solar cells with newly developed organic dyes, such as the
squaraine dye, which permit new configurations of this tandem system. Three configurations
were investigated: two side-by-side dye cells behind a semitransparent hematite …
multiphoton (tandem) approach is required to convert solar energy into hydrogen efficiently
and durably. Here we investigate a promising system consisting of a hematite photoanode in
combination with dye-sensitized solar cells with newly developed organic dyes, such as the
squaraine dye, which permit new configurations of this tandem system. Three configurations
were investigated: two side-by-side dye cells behind a semitransparent hematite …
Given the limitations of the materials available for photoelectrochemical water splitting, a multiphoton (tandem) approach is required to convert solar energy into hydrogen efficiently and durably. Here we investigate a promising system consisting of a hematite photoanode in combination with dye-sensitized solar cells with newly developed organic dyes, such as the squaraine dye, which permit new configurations of this tandem system. Three configurations were investigated: two side-by-side dye cells behind a semitransparent hematite photoanode, two semitransparent dye sensitized solar cells (DSCs) in front of the hematite, and a trilevel hematite/DSC/DSC architecture. Based on the current-voltage curves of state-of-the-art devices made in our laboratories, we found the trilevel tandem architecture (hematite/SQ1 dye/N749 dye) produces the highest operating current density and thus the highest expected solar-to-hydrogen efficiency (1.36% compared with 1.16% with the standard back DSC case and 0.76% for the front DSC case). Further investigation into the wavelength-dependent quantum efficiency of each component revealed that in each case photons lost as a result of scattering and reflection reduce the performance from the expected 3.3% based on the nanostructured hematite photoanodes. We further suggest avenues for the improvement of each configuration from both the DSC and the photoanode parts.
Cambridge University Press
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