Abstract
THE large-scale use of photovoltaic devices for electricity generation is prohibitively expensive at present: generation from existing commercial devices costs about ten times more than conventional methods1. Here we describe a photovoltaic cell, created from low-to medium-purity materials through low-cost processes, which exhibits a commercially realistic energy-conversion efficiency. The device is based on a 10-µm-thick, optically transparent film of titanium dioxide particles a few nanometres in size, coated with a monolayer of a charge-transfer dye to sensitize the film for light harvesting. Because of the high surface area of the semiconductor film and the ideal spectral characteristics of the dye, the device harvests a high proportion of the incident solar energy flux (46%) and shows exceptionally high efficiencies for the conversion of incident photons to electrical current (more than 80%). The overall light-to-electric energy conversion yield is 7.1-7.9% in simulated solar light and 12% in diffuse daylight. The large current densities (greater than 12 mA cm-2) and exceptional stability (sustaining at least five million turnovers without decomposition), as well as the low cost, make practical applications feasible.
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Solid-state dye-sensitized mesoporous TiO2 solar cells with high photon-to-electron conversion efficiencies
Solar cells based on dye-sensitized mesoporous films of TiO2 arelow-cost alternatives to conventional solid-state devices1. Impressive solar-to-electrical energy conversion effi...
Perspectives for dye-sensitized nanocrystalline solar cells
The dye-sensitized solar cells (DYSC) provides a technically and economically credible alternative concept to present day p–n junction photovoltaic devices. In contrast to the c...
Dye-Sensitized Solid-State Heterojunction Solar Cells
Abstract The dye-sensitized solar cell (DSSC) provides a technically and economically viable alternative concept to present-day p–n junction photovoltaic devices. In contrast to...
Efficient inorganic–organic hybrid heterojunction solar cells containing perovskite compound and polymeric hole conductors
Inorganic-organic hybrid structures have become innovative alternatives for next-generation dye-sensitized solar cells, because they combine the advantages of both systems. Here...
Enhancement of Perovskite-Based Solar Cells Employing Core–Shell Metal Nanoparticles
Recently, inorganic and hybrid light absorbers such as quantum dots and organometal halide perovskites have been studied and applied in fabricating thin-film photovoltaic device...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1991
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 353
- Issue
- 6346
- Pages
- 737-740
- Citations
- 28134
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1038/353737a0