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Among the techniques available for the conversion of solar energy to electricity, dye
sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) have attracted huge attention due to the variety of sensitizers
available for exploration and functional alternations. A sensitizer is deemed to play an important
role to harvest light energy in DSSC, therefore it has attracted a lot of attention in the research
and development. Several organic dyes having different donor and acceptor moieties conjugated
with various rigid polyaromatic/heteroaromatic segments and possessing D-π-A architecture
have been developed. They have exhibited impressive photovoltaic performance (ca.10%) when
applied as sensitizers in DSSCs. Efficiency of DSSCs depends on the Fermi level of the
semiconductor, the redox potential of the redox mediator and particularly the light-harvesting
property of the dye. Light-absorption and charge separation in the dyes can be efficiently tuned
by structural engineering with appropriate chemical modifications. As the electronic structure of
the organic dyes respond to slight structural modifications significantly therefore, structureproperty
relationships in organic dyes have to be evaluated actively.
This thesis is divided into nine chapters. First chapter introduces aim and scope of the work.
Though several polyaromatic hydrocarbon based organic dyes have been developed for use in
DSSCs, dipolar compounds featuring a fluorene unit have shown promising potential as light
harvesting component. In second chapter, we present a comprehensive survey of the organic
dyes containing fluorene either in the donor part or as a π-linker in the conjugation pathway in a
conventional donor–π–acceptor molecular configuration. Structural features of the molecular
materials are correlated with the functional properties, such as optical absorption and oxidation
potential. Third chapter describe the design and synthesis of metal free organic dyes based on
diphenylaminofluorene/trifluorenylamine donor and cyanoacrylic acid acceptor for application as
sensitizer in dye-sensitized solar cell. The optical, electrochemical, theoretical and photovoltaic
properties of the sensitizers have been investigated and critically analyzed. It is found that the
trifluorenylamine donor significantly red-shifts the absorption and facilitates the oxidation
property of the dyes when compared to the triphenylamine donor. The longer wavelength
absorption corresponds to the charge transfer from the trifluorenylamine donor to cyanoacrylic
acid acceptor and is confirmed by the TDDFT theoretical computations. The variations in the
photovoltaic performance of the dyes have been corroborated by the dye loading data, IPCE and
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the interfacial kinetic parameters estimated from the intensity modulated
photovoltage/photocurrent spectral measurements. A dye with fluorene and bithiophene
segments in the π-linker exhibited device efficiency up to 5.8%. The enhanced power conversion
efficiency exhibited by this dye when compared to its counterpart containing diphenylamine
donor is attributed to its superior anti-aggregation ability on and comparatively prolonged
electron lifetime.
Chapter 4 deals with the synthesis and characterization of two types of novel organic dyes
(T-shape/rod shape) based on phenothiazine donors, cyanoacrylic acid acceptors and
fluorenylbenzene/fluorenyl-oligothiophene π-spacers for DSSCs. Crystal structure analysis of
one of the dye revealed by single crystal XRD shows co-facial slip-stack columnar packing of
the molecules. The effects of substitution position of donor unit as well as the influence of
different linking segments on the optical, electrochemical and on the photovoltaic properties are
investigated. The optical properties of the dyes are modeled using TDDFT simulation employing
B3LYP level of theory and demonstrated a correlation with the experimental results. The
evaluated results demonstrated that in rod shape configuration phenothiazine help in increasing
the conjugation length and enhance the light harvesting ability. Whereas, the DSSC based on Tshape
dyes display ~2 fold increase in the efficiency due to the favorable LUMO energy level
and effective surface blocking to suppress the recombination of electrons between the electrolyte
I3ˉ and TiO2. The Electron Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS) investigations provide a support to
interpret the solar cell efficiency alternations.
In chapter 5 organic dyes containing 2,7-diaminofluorene-based donor, cyanoacrylic acid
acceptor and various aromatic conjugation segments composed of benzene, fluorene, carbazole
and thiophene units as π- bridge have been synthesized and characterized by optical,
electrochemical and theoretical investigations. The trends observed in the absorption and
electrochemical properties of the dyes are in accordance with the electron-donating ability of the
conjugating segment. Consequently, the dyes containing 2,7-carbazole unit in the π-spacer
exhibited red-shifted absorption and low oxidation potentials than the corresponding fluorene
and phenylene bridged dyes. However, the enhanced power conversion efficiency exhibited by
the fluorene-bridged dyes in the DSSCs is attributed to the broader and intense absorption.
Despite the longer wavelength absorption and reasonable optical density, carbazole bridged dyes
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exhibited low power conversion efficiency in the series which is ascribed to the poor alignment
of dye LUMO level leading to the inhibition of electron injection into the TiO2 conduction band.
In chapter 6 we implicate one or two fluorenylidene moieties in the donor part of
triarylamine organic dyes containing fluorene-oligothiophene spacer in a D-π-A architecture and
used them as sensitizers for nanocrystalline TiO2-based DSSCs. Their optical, electrochemical
and photovoltaic properties are compared with electron accepting dicyanovinyl unit containing
organic sensitizer. Incorporation of fluorenylidene moiety dominates the optical properties of the
dyes in terms of relatively broad and high molar extinction coefficient absorption when
compared to the dicyanovinyl derivative. Theoretical investigations using TDDFT simulations
indicates that the trends in the excitation energies are consistent with the solution spectral data
for higher wavelength absorption and the lower wavelength absorptions attributed to the amine
to auxiliary acceptor charge transfer. The electrochemical properties are influenced by the
number of fluorenylidene chromophore and the electron richness of the linking segment. The
dye-sensitized solar cells fabricated using fluorenylidene-based sensitizers showed higher power
conversion efficiency than the dicyanovinyl derivative attributed to their higher photocurrent
density. A fluorenylidene-based dye exhibited high power conversion efficiency of 6.13% under
full sunlight (AM 1.5G, 100 mW cm-2).
Chap 7 illustrate a comparative study of novel difluorenylamine-based organic dyes
containing carbazole as auxiliary donor, oligothiophene linker and cyanoacrylic acid
acceptor/anchoring group featuring two different architectures (D-D-π-A and D-D-(π-A)2).
Absorption measurements indicate that monoanchoring dyes with D-D-π-A configuration is
beneficial for charge transfer transitions while the dianchoring dyes with D-D-(π-A)2 architecture
lead to intense π-π* transitions suggesting more delocalized electronic structure. Incorporation of
bithiophene in the conjugation slightly lowers the LUMO level of the dyes when compared to the
corresponding thiophene derivatives. The TDDFT computations are performed to rationalize the
trends in the optical and electrochemical properties of the dyes. The DSSC based on
monoanchoring dyes showed 2 to 5-fold increase in the efficiency than the corresponding
dianchoring congeners. Also the use of CDCA as an additive increases the efficiency of the
devices reasonably.
Chap 8 elucidate the synthesis and characterization of new metal free dianchoring organic
dyes featuring A–π–D–π–D–π–A (acceptor – π bridge – donor – π bridge – donor – π bridge –
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acceptor) configuration incorporating fluorene and oligothiophene units. Elongating the
conjugation pathway between the donor and acceptor units altered the distance between the
anchoring sites besides the absorption and redox properties. These dyes exhibit broad and intense
absorption when compared to the corresponding monoanchoring donor–π–acceptor congeners.
Though the dye containing bithiophene unit exhibit comparatively low VOC due to low electron
life time and facile back electron transfer, shows high power conversion efficiency arising from
the good light-harvesting capability attributable to the intense absorption peak in the visible
region and enhanced interfacial electron transfer rate. This work demonstrates that the smaller
distance of separation between the anchoring units increases the insulating capacity of the
molecular layer which retards the back electron transfer.
In chapter 9 a summary of the work accomplished during the dissertation work is presented.
The relationship between the absorption wavelength, short circuit current density (JSC) and open
circuit voltage (VOC) of the sensitizers reported in this work is studied with their efficiency. The
role of molecular structure of the organic dyes on the photophysical and photovoltaic properties
is established for conceptually designing organic sensitizers to conquer the urgent challenges in
DSSCs research. |
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