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Showing papers by "Sang-Hoon Kim published in 2009"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work presents a solid-state solar cell design, consisting of TiO(2) nanotube arrays vertically oriented from the FTO-coated glass substrate, sensitized with unsymmetrical squaraine dye (SQ-1) that absorbs in the red and NIR portion of solar spectrum, and which are uniformly infiltrated with p-type regioregular poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl) (P3HT
Abstract: The development of high-efficiency solid-state excitonic photovoltaic solar cells compatible with solution processing techniques is a research area of intense interest, with the poor optical harvesting in the red and near-IR (NIR) portion of the solar spectrum a significant limitation to device performance. Herein we present a solid-state solar cell design, consisting of TiO(2) nanotube arrays vertically oriented from the FTO-coated glass substrate, sensitized with unsymmetrical squaraine dye (SQ-1) that absorbs in the red and NIR portion of solar spectrum, and which are uniformly infiltrated with p-type regioregular poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl) (P3HT) that absorbs higher energy photons. Our solid-state solar cells exhibit broad, near-UV to NIR, spectral response with external quantum yields of up to 65%. Under UV filtered AM 1.5G of 90 mW/cm(2) intensity we achieve typical device photoconversion efficiencies of 3.2%, with champion device efficiencies of 3.8%.

272 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the use of such coupling to boost the performance of nanowire excitonic solar cells and developed fundamental design principles in choosing donor-acceptor combinations for high efficiency FRET-enhanced solar cells in nanOWire array architectures.
Abstract: Our ability to fabricate close-packed single crystal rutile TiO2 nanowire arrays with average inter-wire distances of 5-10 nm allows us to create and control FRET-induced coupling effects, which can occur in this distance regime, in this architecture. We explored the use of such coupling to boost the performance of nanowire excitonic solar cells. Using Ru complex triplet dye N719 as the energy acceptor and fluorescent tetra tert-butyl substituted zinc phthalocyanine as the energy donor (see Fig. 1 for molecular structures), we obtained up to a four fold improvement in the quantum yield for red photons in the 660-690 nm spectral range. Similarly, by using a carboxylated unsymmetrical squaraine dye as the energy acceptor and highly fluorescent Nile Red dye as the donor (see Fig. 1 for molecular structures), we obtained 60% increased external quantum yields for photons in the 480-580 nm spectral range. For both systems, the use of FRET broadened spectral coverage and improved light harvesting. In this report, we also develop fundamental design principles in choosing donor-acceptor combinations for high efficiency FRET-enhanced solar cells in nanowire array architectures.