Abstract
Photovoltaic performance is shown to depend on ligand capping on PbS nanoparticle solar cells by varying the temperature between 140K and 350K. The thermal response of open-circuit voltage, short-circuit current density, fill-factor and shunt resistance varies between the ligands. A large increase in short-circuit current density at low temperatures is observed for 1,2-ethanedithiol and 3-mercaptopropionic acid and a relatively constant shortcircuit current density is observed for the stiffer 1,4-benzenedithiol. Dark data provide evidence for tunnelling transport being the dominant charge conduction mechanism for all three ligand devices with recombination occurring within deep trap states. Under illumination, devices exhibit band-to-band recombination, indicated by an ideality factor of nearly unity. © 2012 Padilla et al.
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Padilla, D., Zhai, G., Breeze, A. J., Zhang, D., Alers, G. B., & Carter, S. A. (2012). Thermal properties of TiO2/PbS nanoparticle solar cells. Nanomaterials and Nanotechnology, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.5772/55901
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