Investigation of interfacial engineering and charge dynamics in (Sb2S3)-based solar cells

Solid-state dye-sensitized solar cell (ssDSCs) is an emerging technology with the potential to surpass first and second generation solar cells. To date, ssDSC has demonstrated efficiency up to 12.3 %. Challenges due to organic dye stability, degradation and leakage of liquid electrolyte posed diffic...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ee, Ling Gui
Other Authors: Subodh Gautam Mhaisalkar
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/64788
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-64788
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-647882023-03-04T16:49:00Z Investigation of interfacial engineering and charge dynamics in (Sb2S3)-based solar cells Ee, Ling Gui Subodh Gautam Mhaisalkar School of Materials Science & Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Materials Solid-state dye-sensitized solar cell (ssDSCs) is an emerging technology with the potential to surpass first and second generation solar cells. To date, ssDSC has demonstrated efficiency up to 12.3 %. Challenges due to organic dye stability, degradation and leakage of liquid electrolyte posed difficulties in commercialization. Henceforth, efforts were invested to replace dye and liquid electrolyte materials. A promising semiconductor material antimony sulphide (Sb2S3) owing to its high absorption coefficient (a= 1.8 x 105 cm-1) and relatively low band gap (1.7- 1.9 eV) is used to fabricate ssDSCs. For these types of solar cells, the sensitizer is sandwiched in between the mesoporous TiO2 layer and hole-transporting material (HTM). The absorber layer thickness ranges from several nm to tens of nanometers, also known as extremely thin absorber (ETA) solar cells. Antimony sulphide is synthesized by a facile low cost chemical bath deposition (CBD) method. For device fabrication, different strategies were pursued to evaluate antimony sulphide layer in the device. The photo-anode, control of recombination through interfacial layers such as ln(OH)xSy, surface modification and different hole-transporting materials were studied to investigate and enhance photovoltaic performance in devices. Studies on different sized Ti02 nanoparticles allowed a better understanding of the growth mechanism of chemical bath deposition. Although smaller nanoparticle size provides a much larger effective surface area for sensitizer attachment, the smaller pore size leads to an over-aggregation of Sb2S3 particles on the surface pores. An optimum nanoparticle size of> I 00 nm was established and reported to exhibit light scattering effect, achieving an efficiency of2.3% after post treatment. The photo-physical behavior of the annealed prepared by atomic layer deposition (ALD) Sb2S3 was studied by transient absorption spectroscopy (T AS). Crystallized Sb2S3 domains give rise to strong non-degenerate two-photon absorption and slower hot charge carrier cooling ( ~ 17ps). The crystallized domains also slow down the charge carrier recombination from 7.5 ns to 16.7 ns. The increased light absorption, slower hot charge carrier cooling and charge carrier recombination suggest that the annealed Sb2S3 is more suitable for light harvesting application than the as-deposited. The findings suggest that the significance of tuning the morphology of this material system to enhance its photovoltaic performance. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (MSE) 2015-06-04T03:40:02Z 2015-06-04T03:40:02Z 2014 2014 Thesis Ee, L. G. (2014). Investigation of interfacial engineering and charge dynamics in (Sb2S3)-based solar cells. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/64788 10.32657/10356/64788 en 131 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Materials
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Materials
Ee, Ling Gui
Investigation of interfacial engineering and charge dynamics in (Sb2S3)-based solar cells
description Solid-state dye-sensitized solar cell (ssDSCs) is an emerging technology with the potential to surpass first and second generation solar cells. To date, ssDSC has demonstrated efficiency up to 12.3 %. Challenges due to organic dye stability, degradation and leakage of liquid electrolyte posed difficulties in commercialization. Henceforth, efforts were invested to replace dye and liquid electrolyte materials. A promising semiconductor material antimony sulphide (Sb2S3) owing to its high absorption coefficient (a= 1.8 x 105 cm-1) and relatively low band gap (1.7- 1.9 eV) is used to fabricate ssDSCs. For these types of solar cells, the sensitizer is sandwiched in between the mesoporous TiO2 layer and hole-transporting material (HTM). The absorber layer thickness ranges from several nm to tens of nanometers, also known as extremely thin absorber (ETA) solar cells. Antimony sulphide is synthesized by a facile low cost chemical bath deposition (CBD) method. For device fabrication, different strategies were pursued to evaluate antimony sulphide layer in the device. The photo-anode, control of recombination through interfacial layers such as ln(OH)xSy, surface modification and different hole-transporting materials were studied to investigate and enhance photovoltaic performance in devices. Studies on different sized Ti02 nanoparticles allowed a better understanding of the growth mechanism of chemical bath deposition. Although smaller nanoparticle size provides a much larger effective surface area for sensitizer attachment, the smaller pore size leads to an over-aggregation of Sb2S3 particles on the surface pores. An optimum nanoparticle size of> I 00 nm was established and reported to exhibit light scattering effect, achieving an efficiency of2.3% after post treatment. The photo-physical behavior of the annealed prepared by atomic layer deposition (ALD) Sb2S3 was studied by transient absorption spectroscopy (T AS). Crystallized Sb2S3 domains give rise to strong non-degenerate two-photon absorption and slower hot charge carrier cooling ( ~ 17ps). The crystallized domains also slow down the charge carrier recombination from 7.5 ns to 16.7 ns. The increased light absorption, slower hot charge carrier cooling and charge carrier recombination suggest that the annealed Sb2S3 is more suitable for light harvesting application than the as-deposited. The findings suggest that the significance of tuning the morphology of this material system to enhance its photovoltaic performance.
author2 Subodh Gautam Mhaisalkar
author_facet Subodh Gautam Mhaisalkar
Ee, Ling Gui
format Theses and Dissertations
author Ee, Ling Gui
author_sort Ee, Ling Gui
title Investigation of interfacial engineering and charge dynamics in (Sb2S3)-based solar cells
title_short Investigation of interfacial engineering and charge dynamics in (Sb2S3)-based solar cells
title_full Investigation of interfacial engineering and charge dynamics in (Sb2S3)-based solar cells
title_fullStr Investigation of interfacial engineering and charge dynamics in (Sb2S3)-based solar cells
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of interfacial engineering and charge dynamics in (Sb2S3)-based solar cells
title_sort investigation of interfacial engineering and charge dynamics in (sb2s3)-based solar cells
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/64788
_version_ 1759856941032538112