Light harvesting in solar cells using natural pigments from red fruits adsorbed to mesoporous TiO2


Autoria(s): Pinto, Ana Lúcia Moreira
Contribuinte(s)

Laia, César

Parola, A. J.

Data(s)

03/12/2015

03/12/2015

01/11/2015

01/12/2015

Resumo

Nature has developed strategies to present us with a wide variety of colours, from the green of leaves to the bright colours seen in flowers. Anthocyanins are between these natural pigments that are responsible for the great diversity of colours seen in flowers and fruits. Anthocyanins have been used to sensitize titanium dioxide (TiO2) in Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells (DSSCs). DSSCs have become one of the most popular research topic in photovoltaic cells due to their low production costs when compared to other alternatives. DSSCs are inspired in what happens in nature during photosynthesis. A primary charge separation is achieved by means of a photoexcited dye capable of performing the electron injection into the conduction band of a wide band-gap semiconductor, usually TiO2. With this work we aimed to synthesize a novel mesoporous TiO2 structure as the semiconductor in order to increase the dye loading. We used natural occurring dyes such as anthocyanins and their synthetic flavylium relatives, as an alternative to the widely used metal complexes of Ru(II) which are expensive and are environmentally unsafe. This offers not only the chance to use safer dyes for DSSCs, but also to take profit of waste biological products, such as wine and olive oil production residues that are heavily loaded with anthocyanin dyes. We also performed a photodegradation study using TiO2 as the catalyst to degrade dye contaminants, such as those from the wine production waste, by photo-irradiation of the system in the visible region of the light spectrum. We were able to succeed in the synthesis of mesoporous TiO2 both powder and thin film, with a high capacity to load a large amount of dye. We proved the concept of photodegradation using TiO2 as catalyst. And finally, we show that wine production waste is a possible dye source to DSSCs application.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10362/16026

Idioma(s)

eng

Relação

NMP4-SL-2012-310651 under FP7-NMP-2012-SMALL-6

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Natural dyes #Photoinduced reactions #Dye-sensitized solar cells #Anthocyanins #Titanium dioxide #Domínio/Área Científica::Engenharia e Tecnologia::Engenharia Química
Tipo

masterThesis