University of Notre Dame
Browse

Quantum dot solar cells: Hole transfer as a limiting factor in boosting the photoconversion efficiency

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-07, 19:53 authored by P. V. Kamat, J. A. Christians, J. G. Radich
Semiconductor nanostructures are attractive for designing low-cost solar cells with tunable photoresponse. The recent advances in size- and shape-selective synthesis have enabled the design of quantum dot solar cells with photoconversion efficiencies greater than 5%. To make them competitive with other existing thin film or polycrystalline photovoltaic technologies, it is important to overcome kinetic barriers for charge transfer at semiconductor interfaces. This feature article focuses on the limitations imposed by slow hole transfer in improving solar cell performance and its role in the stability of metal chalcogenide solar cells. Strategies to improve the rate of hole transfer through surface-modified redox relays offer new opportunities to overcome the hole-transfer limitation. The mechanistic and kinetic aspects of hole transfer in quantum dot solar cells (QDSCs), nanowire solar cells (NWSCs), and extremely thin absorber (ETA) solar cells are discussed.

History

Temporal Coverage

2014

Extent

Page 5716-5725

Publisher

Langmuir

Source

Volume 30

Usage metrics

    Radiation Laboratory

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC