Kinetic Simulations Of Charge Injection Kinetics From Ultrafast Experiments To Steady State Conditions

ORAL

Abstract

We are building towards a multiscale description of solar energy conversion in dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSC). We reported in an initial study a kinetic framework for the femtosecond to microsecond photophysics of a set of ruthenium complexes in solution that produces simulated time-resolved spectroscopic signals that are in quantitative agreement with experiments. Additionally, we have demonstrated that datasets of dynamical observations and steady state measurements are both necessary to predict dye interactions under 1-sun conditions. We discuss extensions of our kinetic framework to 1) compare the excitation and decay kinetics of ruthenium complexes in solution and on ZrO2 films where there is no charge transfer, 2) establish competing intramolecular transitions and charge transfer to TiO2, and 3) illustrate that by including explicit experimental interactions in our model, rate coefficients for charge injection, not phenomenological lifetimes, are estimated. Results for simulations under solar irradiance are discussed in context of DSSCs.

*Supported by the U S Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Solar Photochemistry Program (No. DE-AC02-05CH11231) and the UNC EFRC Center for Solar Fuels, an Energy Frontier Research Center by (No. DE-SC0001011).

Presenters

  • Thomas Cheshire

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Authors

  • Thomas Cheshire

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Jeb Boodry

    • Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, University of California, Berkeley
  • M. Kyle Brennaman

    • Department of Chemistry, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
  • Paul Giokas

    • Coherent Inc.
  • David Zigler

    • Chemistry & Biochemistry Department, California Polytechnic State University
  • Andrew Moran

    • Department of Chemistry, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
  • John Papanikolas

    • Department of Chemistry, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
  • Gerald Meyer

    • Department of Chemistry, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
  • Thomas Meyer

    • Department of Chemistry, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
  • Frances Houle

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory