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Plasmonic dye-sensitized solar cells through collapsible gold nanofingers.

Wenruo FangPan HuZhenqiu WuYoufeng XiaoYunxia SuiDalong PanGuangxu SuMingwei ZhuPeng ZhanFanxin LiuWei Wu
Published in: Nanotechnology (2021)
Plasmonic nanostructures are successfully demonstrated in solar cells due to their broad spectra-selective resonance in the range of ultraviolet to near-infrared, and thus light absorption can be mostly improved and power conversion efficiency (PCE) further. Here, we demonstrate plasmonic dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) using collapsible Au nanofingers to build photoanode to enhance light absorption. In this plasmonic DSSCs, by balancing local field enhancement due to gap-plasmon resonance and dye fluorescence quenching, the optimal gap size in collapsed Au/Al2O3/Au nanofingers is designed by twice the Al2O3thickness and then deposited a TiO2layer as photoanode. The results show that the PCE of DSSCs is mostly improved as compared to DSSCs with photoanode of Au/Al2O3/TiO2films, which can be ascribed to the coupled local field enhancement within the sub-nanometer gaps. In addition, fluorescence of dyes on plasmonic nanofingers is nearly 10 times higher than plain Au/Al2O3/TiO2films, which further proves the dye absorption enhancement. These plasmonic nanofingers enable the precise engineering of gap-plasmon modes and can be scaled up to wafer scale with low cost by the nanoimprint lithography technique, which suggests the feasibility of applying our result in constructing the photoanode for other types of solar cells.
Keyphrases
  • solar cells
  • energy transfer
  • visible light
  • quantum dots
  • sensitive detection
  • low cost
  • single molecule
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • highly efficient
  • aqueous solution
  • silver nanoparticles