Dye-Sensitized Nonstoichiometric Strontium Titanate Core-Shell Photocathodes for Photoelectrosynthesis Applications.
Caroline E ReillyRobert J DillonAnimesh NayakShane BroganTaylor MootMatthew K BrennamanRene LopezThomas J MeyerLeila AlibabaeiPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
A core-shell approach that utilizes a high-surface-area conducting core and an outer semiconductor shell is exploited here to prepare p-type dye-sensitized solar energy cells that operate with a minimal applied bias. Photocathodes were prepared by coating thin films of nanocrystalline indium tin oxide with a 0.8 nm Al2O3 seeding layer, followed by the chemical growth of nonstoichiometric strontium titanate. Films were annealed and sensitized with either a porphyrin chromophore or a chromophore-catalyst molecular assembly consisting of the porphyrin covalently tethered to the ruthenium complex. The sensitized photoelectrodes produced cathodic photocurrents of up to -315 μA/cm2 under simulated sunlight (AM1.5G, 100 mW/cm2) in aqueous media, pH 5. The photocurrent was increased by the addition of regenerative hole donors to the system, consistent with slow interfacial recombination kinetics, an important property of p-type dye-sensitized electrodes.
Keyphrases
- photodynamic therapy
- highly efficient
- room temperature
- ionic liquid
- stem cells
- metal organic framework
- mesenchymal stem cells
- perovskite solar cells
- reduced graphene oxide
- dna damage
- visible light
- cell cycle arrest
- electron transfer
- cell death
- gold nanoparticles
- carbon nanotubes
- kidney transplantation
- light emitting