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research article

Nanocrystalline titanium oxide electrodes for photovoltaic applications

Barbe, Christophe J.
•
Arendse, Francine  
•
Comte, Pascal  
Show more
1997
Journal of the American Ceramic Society

During the past five years, we have developed in our laboratory a new type of solar cell that is based on a photoelectrochemical process. The light absorption is performed by a monolayer of dye (i.e., a Ruthenium complex) that is adsorbed chemically at the surface of a semiconductor (i.e., titanium oxide (TiO2)). When excited by a photon, the dye has the ability to transfer an electron to the semiconductor. The electric field that is inside the material allows extraction of the electron, and the positive charge is transferred from the dye to a redox mediator that is present in solution. A respectable photovoltaic efficiency (i.e., 10%) is obtained by the use of mesoporous, nanostructured films of anatase particles. We will show how the TiO2 electrode microstructure influences the photovoltaic response of the cell. More specifically, we will focus on how processing parameters such as precursor chemistry, temperature for hydrothermal growth, binder addition, and sintering conditions influence the film porosity, pore‐size distribution, light scattering, and electron percolation and consequently affect the solar‐cell efficiency.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1111/j.1151-2916.1997.tb03245.x
Web of Science ID

WOS:000071152200024

Author(s)
Barbe, Christophe J.
Arendse, Francine  
Comte, Pascal  
Jirousek, Marie
Lenzmann, Frank  
Shklover, Valery
Gratzel, Michael  
Date Issued

1997

Published in
Journal of the American Ceramic Society
Volume

80

Issue

12

Start page

3157

End page

3171

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LPI  
Available on Infoscience
February 21, 2006
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/224912
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