Naim, WaadNovelli, VittoriaNikolinakos, IliasBarbero, NadiaDzeba, IvaGrifoni, FionnualaRen, YamengAlnasser, ThomasVelardo, AmaliaBorrelli, RaffaeleHaacke, StefanZakeeruddin, Shaik M.Graetzel, MichaelBarolo, ClaudiaSauvage, Frederic2021-06-052021-06-052021-06-052021-04-2610.1021/jacsau.1c00045https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/178602WOS:000651113700006Most photovoltaic (PV) technologies are opaque to maximize visible light absorption. However, see-through solar cells open additional perspectives for PV integration. Looking beyond maximizing visible light harvesting, this work considers the human eye photopic response to optimize a selective near-infrared sensitizer based on a polymethine cyanine structure (VG20-C-x) to render dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) fully transparent and colorless. This peculiarity was achieved by conferring to the dye the ability to strongly and sharply absorb beyond 800 nm (S-0-S-1 transition) while rejecting the upper S-0-S-n contributions far in the blue where the human retina is poorly sensitive. When associated with an aggregation-free anatase TiO2 photoanode, the selective NIR-DSSC can display 3.1% power conversion efficiency, up to 76% average visible transmittance (AVT), a value approaching the 78% AVT value of a standard double glazing window while reaching a color rendering index (CRI) of 92.1%. The ultrafast and fast charge transfer processes are herein discussed, clarifying the different relaxation channels from the dye monomer excited states and highlighting the limiting steps to provide future directions to enhance the performances of this nonintrusive NIR-DSSC technology.transparent photovoltaic (tpv)dye-sensitized solar cells (dssc)near-infrared sensitizerscyanine dyestime-resolved spectroscopieshigh color rendering index tpvnanocrystalline tio2 filmscharge-transfersquaraine dyeselectron injectionco-sensitizationcyanine dyesconversion efficiencysemitransparentperformancedesignTransparent and Colorless Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells Exceeding 75% Average Visible Transmittancetext::journal::journal article::research article