| Literature DB >> 28940949 |
Jung Kyu Kim1,2, Sung Uk Chai2, Yoonjun Cho2, Lili Cai1, Sung June Kim2,3, Sangwook Park1, Jong Hyeok Park2, Xiaolin Zheng1.
Abstract
Mesoporous TiO2 nanoparticle (NP) films are broadly used as electrodes in photoelectrochemical cells, dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs), and perovskite solar cells (PSCs). State-of-the-art mesoporous TiO2 NP films for these solar cells are fabricated by annealing TiO2 paste-coated fluorine-doped tin oxide glass in a box furnace at 500 °C for ≈30 min. Here, the use of a nontraditional reactor, i.e., flame, is reported for the high throughput and ultrafast annealing of TiO2 paste (≈1 min). This flame-annealing method, compared to conventional furnace annealing, exhibits three distinct benefits. First, flame removes polymeric binders in the initial TiO2 paste more completely because of its high temperature (≈1000 °C). Second, flame induces strong interconnections between TiO2 nanoparticles without affecting the underlying transparent conducting oxide substrate. Third, the flame-induced carbothermic reduction on the TiO2 surface facilitates charge injection from the dye/perovskite to TiO2 . Consequently, when the flame-annealed mesoporous TiO2 film is used to fabricate DSSCs and PSCs, both exhibit enhanced charge transport and higher power conversion efficiencies than those fabricated using furnace-annealed TiO2 films. Finally, when the ultrafast flame-annealing method is combined with a fast dye-coating method to fabricate DSSC devices, its total fabrication time is reduced from over 3 h to ≈10 min.Entities:
Keywords: TiO2 photoelectrodes; dye-sensitized solar cells; fast metal oxide sintering; flame annealing; perovskite solar cells
Year: 2017 PMID: 28940949 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201702260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281