Emilio Palomares
Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies
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Publication
Featured researches published by Emilio Palomares.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Brian C. O'Regan; Ismael López-Duarte; M.V. Martinez-Diaz; Amparo Forneli; Josep Albero; Ana Morandeira; Emilio Palomares; Tomás Torres; Durrant
In order to increase the energy efficiency of dye-sensitized solar cells beyond 10%, an improved dye needs to be developed with greater light absorption in the red and near-infrared. Many dyes have been tested for this purpose; however, no dye with significant absorption beyond 750 nm has functioned properly. We have examined a series of ruthenium phthalocyanines, a dye class with large and tunable absorption in the red. For these dyes we observe a large reduction in the output voltage of the cells relative to the benchmark dye (N719). By examination of photovoltage transients and charge density measurements, we demonstrate that this reduction in voltage is caused by a 100-fold increase in the rate constant for recombination (iodine reduction) at the TiO2/electrolyte interface. N719, however, does not seem to catalyze this reaction. By examination of the literature, we propose that catalysis of the recombination reaction may be occurring for many other classes of potentially useful dyes including porphyri...
Journal of Applied Physics | 2004
Francisco Fabregat-Santiago; Jorge García-Cañadas; Emilio Palomares; John N. Clifford; Saif A. Haque; James R. Durrant; Germà Garcia-Belmonte; Juan Bisquert
We investigate the effect of a thin alumina coating of nanocrystalline TiO2 films on recombination dynamics of dye-sensitized solar cells. Both coated and uncoated cells were measured by a combination of techniques: transient absorption spectroscopy, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, and open-circuit voltage decay. It is found that the alumina barrier reduces the recombination of photoinjected electrons to both dye cations and the oxidized redox couple. It is proposed that this observed retardation can be attributed primarily to two effects: almost complete passivation of surface trap states in TiO2 that are able to inject electrons to acceptor species, and slowing down by a factor of 3–4 the rate of interfacial charge transfer from conduction-band states.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
B. C. Regan; Piers R. F. Barnes; Xiaoe Li; ChunHung Law; Emilio Palomares; José Manuel Marín-Beloqui
Methylammonium lead iodide (MAPI) cells of the design FTO/sTiO2/mpTiO2/MAPI/Spiro-OMeTAD/Au, where FTO is fluorine-doped tin oxide, sTiO2 indicates solid-TiO2, and mpTiO2 is mesoporous TiO2, are studied using transient photovoltage (TPV), differential capacitance, charge extraction, current interrupt, and chronophotoamperometry. We show that in mpTiO2/MAPI cells there are two kinds of extractable charge stored under operation: a capacitive electronic charge (∼0.2 μC/cm(2)) and another, larger charge (40 μC/cm(2)), possibly related to mobile ions. Transient photovoltage decays are strongly double exponential with two time constants that differ by a factor of ∼5, independent of bias light intensity. The fast decay (∼1 μs at 1 sun) is assigned to the predominant charge recombination pathway in the cell. We examine and reject the possibility that the fast decay is due to ferroelectric relaxation or to the bulk photovoltaic effect. Like many MAPI solar cells, the studied cells show significant J-V hysteresis. Capacitance vs open circuit voltage (V(oc)) data indicate that the hysteresis involves a change in internal potential gradients, likely a shift in band offset at the TiO2/MAPI interface. The TPV results show that the V(oc) hysteresis is not due to a change in recombination rate constant. Calculation of recombination flux at V(oc) suggests that the hysteresis is also not due to an increase in charge separation efficiency and that charge generation is not a function of applied bias. We also show that the J-V hysteresis is not a light driven effect but is caused by exposure to electrical bias, light or dark.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2007
Sergio Tatay; Saif A. Haque; Brian C. O'Regan; James R. Durrant; Wiljan Verhees; Jan Kroon; Anton Vidal-Ferran; Pablo Gaviña; Emilio Palomares
The photovoltaic performance of liquid electrolyte and solid-state dye sensitized solar cells, employing a squarilium methoxy cyanide dye, are evaluated in terms of interfacial electron transfer kinetics. Dye adsorption to the metal oxide film resulted in a mixed population of aggregated and monomeric sensitizer dyes. Emission quenching data, coupled with transient absorption studies, indicate that efficient electron injection was only achieved by the monomeric dyes, with the aggregated dye population having an injection yield an order of magnitude lower. In liquid electrolyte devices, transient absorption studies indicate that photocurrent generation is further limited by slow kinetics of the regeneration of monomeric dye cations by the iodide/iodine redox couple. The regeneration dynamics are observed to be too slow (≫ 100 µs) to compete effectively with the recombination of injected electrons with dye cations. In contrast, for solid-state devices employing the organic hole conductor spiro-OMeTAD, the regeneration dynamics are fast enough (≪ 1 µs) to compete effectively with this recombination reaction, resulting in enhanced photocurrent generation.
Angewandte Chemie | 2008
Hyunbong Choi; Sanghoon Kim; Sang Ook Kang; Jaejung Ko; Moon-Sung Kang; John N. Clifford; Amparo Forneli; Emilio Palomares; Mohammad Khaja Nazeeruddin; Michael Grätzel
Keywords: aluminum oxide ; electron transfer ; hole transfer ; sensitizers ; titanium dioxide ; Efficient Co-Sensitization ; Organic Sensitizers ; Recombination Dynamics ; Charge Recombination ; Highly Efficient ; Blocking Layers ; Electrodes ; Dendrimers ; Cyanine Reference EPFL-ARTICLE-160552doi:10.1002/anie.200802852View record in Web of Science Record created on 2010-11-30, modified on 2016-08-09
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2009
Juan-José Cid; Miguel García-Iglesias; Jun-Ho Yum; Amparo Forneli; Josep Albero; Eugenia Martínez-Ferrero; Purificación Vázquez; Michael Grätzel; Mohammad Khaja Nazeeruddin; Emilio Palomares; Tomás Torres
A series of unsymmetrical zinc phthalocyanines bearing an anchoring carboxylic function linked to the phthalocyanine ring through different spacers were designed for dye-sensitised solar cells (DSSC). The modification of the spacer group allows not only a variable distance between the dye and the nanocrystalline TiO(2), but also a distinct orientation of the phthalocyanine on the semiconductor surface. The photovoltaic data show that the nature of the spacer group plays a significant role in the electron injection from the photo-excited dye into the nanocrystalline TiO(2) semiconductor, the recombination rates and the efficiency of the cells. The incident monochromatic photon-to-current conversion efficiency (IPCE) for phthalocyanines bearing an insulating spacer is as low as 9%, whereas for those with a conducting spacer an outstanding IPCE 80% was obtained.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2010
Menny Shalom; Josep Albero; Eugenia Martínez-Ferrero; Arie Zaban; Emilio Palomares
Here, we present a new DSSC design, consisting of sequential QDs and dye sensitization layers, that opens the path toward high optical density DSSCs that cover a significant part of the solar spectrum. The new configuration is enabled by the application of an amorphous TiO2 layer between the two sensitizers, allowing both electron injection from the outer absorber and fast hole extraction from the inner sensitizing layer. Utilizing two sensitizing layers, we obtain a 250% increase in cell efficiency compared to a QD monolayer cell.
Energy and Environmental Science | 2011
Miquel Planells; Laia Pellejà; John N. Clifford; Mariachiara Pastore; Filippo De Angelis; Núria López; Seth R. Marder; Emilio Palomares
Two new D–π–A type organic sensitizers, MP124 and MP-I-50, were synthesized and their electrochemical and spectroscopic properties studied. Efficiencies of DSSC devices utilizing these dyes were also investigated, where sensitization solvent, sensitization time and additive concentration were all varied. Under standard AM 1.5G simulated solar radiation, optimized MP124 devices show an efficiency of 7.45% (Voc = 0.73 V; Jsc = 14.44 mA cm−2; FF = 70%) while optimized MP-I-50 devices show an efficiency of 5.66% (Voc = 0.68 V; Jsc = 12.06 mA cm−2; FF = 69%). Transient absorption spectroscopy studies show that regeneration of dye cations by the red-ox electrolyte was more efficient in MP124cells which is attributed to its higher HOMO energy leading to greater driving force for the regeneration reaction. Transient photovoltage studies showed that electron lifetimes were longer lived in MP124 explaining the higher Voc for these cells compared to MP-I-50cells. DFT and MP2 calculations indicate that this is due to the greater tendency of MP-I-50 to form charge-transfer complexes with the I2 species in the electrolyte, due to the presence of an additional EDOT in its structure compared to MP124. This work highlights the effect that small changes to the sensitizer structure can have on the interfacial charge transfer reactions and ultimately on the device efficiency.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Anna Reynal; Amparo Forneli; Eugenia Martínez-Ferrero; Antonio Sánchez-Díaz; Anton Vidal-Ferran; B. C. Regan; Emilio Palomares
A series of heteroleptic ruthenium(II) polypyridyl complexes containing phenanthroline ligands have been designed, synthesized, and characterized. The spectroscopic and electrochemical properties of the complexes have been studied in solution and adsorbed onto semiconductor nanocrystalline metal oxide particles. The results show that for two of the ruthenium complexes, bearing electron-donating (-NH2) or electron-withdrawing (-NO2) groups, the presence of the redox-active I(-)/I3(-) electrolyte produces important changes in the interfacial charge transfer processes that limit the device performance. For example, those dyes enhanced the electron recombination reaction between the photoinjected electrons at TiO2 and the oxidized redox electrolyte. In an effort to understand the details of such striking observations, we have monitored the charge transfer reactions taking place at the different interfaces of the devices using time-resolved single photon counting, laser transient spectroscopy, and light-induced photovoltage measurements.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Damien Joly; Laia Pellejà; Stéphanie Narbey; Frédéric Oswald; Julien Chiron; John N. Clifford; Emilio Palomares; Renaud Demadrille
Among the new photovoltaic technologies, the Dye-Sensitized Solar Cell (DSC) is becoming a realistic approach towards energy markets such as BIPV (Building Integrated PhotoVoltaics). In order to improve the performances of DSCs and to increase their commercial attractiveness, cheap, colourful, stable and highly efficient ruthenium-free dyes must be developed. Here we report the synthesis and complete characterization of a new purely organic sensitizer (RK1) that can be prepared and synthetically upscaled rapidly. Solar cells containing this orange dye show a power conversion efficiency of 10.2% under standard conditions (AM 1.5G, 1000 Wm−2) using iodine/iodide as the electrolyte redox shuttle in the electrolyte, which is among the few examples of DSC using an organic dyes and iodine/iodide red/ox pair to overcome the 10% efficiency barrier. We demonstrate that the combination of this dye with an ionic liquid electrolyte allows the fabrication of solar cells that show power conversion efficiencies of up to 7.36% that are highly stable with no measurable degradation of initial performances after 2200 h of light soaking at 65°C under standard irradiation conditions. RK1 achieves one of the best output power conversion efficiencies for a solar cell based on the iodine/iodide electrolyte, combining high efficiency and outstanding stability.