Loading...
History: Manufacturing of Large Dye Sensitized Solar Cell at home
View page
Collapse Into Edit Sessions
Source of version: 15
«
»
!Manufacturing large dye sensitized solar cell glass at home laboratory {vimeo url="https://vimeo.com /816426955" showTitle="false" quality="high" showByline="true"} !!Introduction Dye sensitized solar cells are an easy-to-manufacture and cheap photovoltaic device that can be made in a home studio. However, the efficiency is still low, making it difficult to achieve commercial purposes (mainly it's limited by the conductivity of the FTO or ITO layer in its system). The pattern and color of the TiO2 layer and the etched matrix on FTO glass in DSSC can be highly customized, so it opens the possibility to smart surface design with aesthetic. The chemicals used in the experiment are mostly purchased from Greatcells Solar, therefore the manufacturing process is mostly conventional. The challenging parts here are temperature control to prevent glass deformation with large glass and the assembling techniques to prevent the electrolyte leaking and the corrosion of the silver traces in the cell caused by the iodine based electrolyte. {img fileId="1179" thumb="box" width=400 desc=The history of the development of the 3rd generation solar cells.}{img fileId="1410" thumb="box" width=400 desc=DSSC schematic of the cells in this experiment in size of 30x60 cm.} {img fileId="1413" thumb="box" width=400 desc= Schematic representation of a TiO2-based DSSC. DSSC, Dye-sensitized solar cell.} !!1. Experiment !!!1.1 Conductive etching #In order to obtain enough voltage, we must make a series circuit inside the battery. To achieve this goal, we must first etch the FTO glass to make a vertically conductive series circuit. The cross section of the structure and 12 batteries are explained in Figure 1. Size and position in two glass electrodes. Add 26.3 mL of 38% hydrochloric acid solution to the beaker, and then add water to fill up to 100 mL to prepare a 2M HCl solution. Stick Kapton tape on the FTO glass substrate to protect the parts that do not want to be etched, coat a layer of zinc powder on the FTO glass substrate, and then cover it with 2M HCl solution, and wait for the reaction to complete. Using a cotton swab, vigorously wipe the etched area on the substrate and rinse with deionized water. Finally use a multimeter to check the resistance of the etched area, make sure the 12 conductive strips are all isolated from each other. {img fileId="1398" thumb="box" width=150 desc=Photoresist wet film cured on FTO glass using 365nm UV lamp} {img fileId="1399" thumb="box" width=150 desc= After the photoresist wet film is fully cured, remove the Kapton tape to prepare for etching} {img fileId="1405" thumb="box" width=150 desc=Use a cotton swab to apply zinc powder to areas that do not have wet film photoresist}{img fileId="1406" thumb="box" width=150 desc=Mix diluted hydrochloric acid with zinc powder}{img fileId="1402" thumb="box" width=150 desc=Wait 15 minutes for the etch reaction to complete} {img fileId="1403" thumb="box" width=150 desc=Immerse the etched FTO in sodium hydroxide solution}{img fileId="1404" thumb="box" width=150 desc=After the wet film is completely peeled off, take out the FTO glass and clean the surface with water and ethanol}{img fileId="1407" thumb="box" width=150 desc=Make sure the 12 conductive strips are completely disconnected} {img fileId="1396" thumb="box" width=150 desc= Photoelectrode and counter electrode after etching} {img fileId="1397" thumb="box" width=150 desc=Apply Kapton tape mask on the etched FTO glass, ready to coat titanium dioxide and platinum paste} !!!1.2 Preparation and Sintering of TiO2 Layer for Photoelectrode #Tape to the glass with Kapton tape and apply the TiO2 group barrier BL-1 slurry on a 60 x 30 cm piece of FTO glass using a glass rod applicator. Then, the FTO was sent into the electric kiln to reach 125ºC at a ramp rate of 8ºC per minute, and kept baking for 30 minutes and then naturally cooled to room temperature. #Coat TiO2 porous layer 18NR-T slurry in the same way, with a ramp rate of 8 ºC per minute to 500ºC. {img type="fileId" fileId="1182" thumb="box" width="400" desc="Titanium dioxide sintering temperature curve reference"} !!!1.3 Counter electrode platinum layer preparation and sintering #Preparation of the counter electrode: PT-1 platinum slurry was also coated on the FTO glass using a glass coater, and then cooled to room temperature naturally after a ramp rate of 8 ºC per minute to 500 ºC and maintained for 30 minutes. {img type="fileId" fileId="1387" thumb="box" width="400" desc="Platinum sintering temperature curve reference"} {img fileId="1377" thumb="box" width=150 desc= Photoelectrode and counter electrode before entering the kiln for sintering}{img fileId="1380" thumb="box" width=150 desc=Photoelectrodes and counter electrodes are alternately placed in the kiln for sintering}{img fileId="1376" thumb="box" width=150 desc= TiO2 photoelectrode after sintering and before dyeing} !!!1.4 Dye preparation #Dissolve 0.1 g of N719 dye powder in 250 ml of 95% ethanol, use a heating mixer to heat at 50ºC for 18 hours to obtain N719 dye solution, fill it into a light-proof glass bottle and place it in a dark place at room temperature. #Immerse the prepared photoanode in the N719 dye solution for 24 hours at room temperature, then take it out, recover the dye solution into a light-proof bottle, and then wash off the excess dye solution on the glass with ethanol. {img fileId="1389" thumb="box" width=150 desc=Measure 100mg of N719 dye powder with a micro scale} {img fileId="1390" thumb="box" width=150 desc=N719 powder should avoid light pollution during heat stirring process} !!!1.5 Preparation of silver wires on the counter electrode #Use Kapton tape on the glass to make the mask of the silver line. The silver paste model is Acheson's 725A, which is coated with a glass coater. After coating, place the counter electrode in an electric kiln and bake at 120ºC for 15 minutes, then cool down to room temperature naturally. {img fileId="1392" thumb="box" width=150 desc=Silver wire mask making}{img fileId="1393" thumb="box" width=150 desc=Silver wire made of 725A silver paste} !!!1.6 Electrolyte preparation In this case the product from Greatcell solar EL-UHSE was used, or you can make your own electrolyte by following formula, there are two versions. 1. 64mg of iodine (i2), 830mg of potassium iodide (KI), 10ml of ethylene glycol. 2. 127mg of iodine crystals, 830mg of potassium iodide (KI), 10ml of ethylene glycol. !!!1.7 Cell Assembling #The coatings on the two electrode faces are facing each other, fixed with several clips and injected electrolyte between them, using a dropper to drop a few drops of EL-UHSE electrolyte purchased from Great Cell Solar from the open gap. {img type="fileId" fileId="1394" thumb="box" width="300" desc="The prepared counter electrode (left) and photoelectrode (right"} {img type="fileId" fileId="1379" thumb="box" height="300" desc="Assembled 30x60cm dye-sensitive battery (with printing pattern, no silver wire built-in vertical conduction series"}{img fileId="1388" thumb=" box" height=300 desc=Assembled 30x60cm dye-sensitive battery (no printing pattern, silver wire built-in vertical conduction in series} !! 2. Results and obstacles !!!2.1 Measuring voltage #This experiment does not use a solar simulator as a test light source, and only measures the output power under natural sunlight at noon. After the finished product is packaged, the open circuit voltage and open circuit current are measured to be about 5.8V, 51mA respectively. {img fileId="1411" thumb="box" width=150 desc=Open-circuit current measurement at the 21st day from the manufacturing }{img fileId="1412" thumb="box" width=150 desc=Open-circuit voltage measurement at the 21st day from the manufacturing } !!!2.3 Assembling without DuPont Surlyn film The assembly of the FTO electrodes in this experiment was cost-effective and temporary, using only clips without Surlyn film. Consequently, some of the silver traces have corroded due to the iodine-based electrolyte. This corrosion occurred because it was challenging to heat-press the Surlyn film within the large-size glasses. The dissolution of the silver traces is evident in the pictures. However, despite this issue, the cell still exhibited an output of 0.33 watts under noon sunlight after one month, suggesting that there is no significant decline in performance. This may be attributed to the silver traces not being tightly bonded with the FTO, resulting in similar measurements between cells with compact and corroded silver traces. The proper method for assembling the electrodes with Surlyn film or other compounds at the DIY level is still an area that requires exploration and investigation. {img type="fileId" fileId="1408" thumb="box" width="200" desc="After the silver paste interacts with the electrolyte, the silver paste melts and diffuses in the electrolyte"} !!Reference #Martineau, David. n.d. “Dye Solar Cells for Real.” #Wei, Tzu‐Chien, Jo‐Lin Lan, Chi‐Chao Wan, Wen‐Chi Hsu, and Ya‐Huei Chang. 2013. “Fabrication of Grid Type Dye Sensitized Solar Modules with 7% Conversion Efficiency by Utilizing Commercially Available Materials.” Progress in Photovoltaics: Research and Applications 21 (8): 1625–33. https://doi.org/10.1002/pip.2252. #Mariani, Paolo, Antonio Agresti, Luigi Vesce, Sara Pescetelli, Alessandro Lorenzo Palma, Flavia Tomarchio, Panagiotis Karagiannidis, Andrea C. Ferrari, and Aldo Di Carlo. 2021. “Graphene-Based Interconnects for Stable Dye-Sensitized Solar Modules.” ACS Applied Energy Materials 4 (1): 98–110. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsaem.0c01960. #https://www.ossila.com/products/fto-glass-unpatterned#FTO-Glass-Etch #Make a Solar Cell - TiO2/Raspberry based. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WHTbw5jy6qU #“From Capitalist Realism to a Solarpunk Reality: Building the Infrastructures of a Better Future - YouTube.” n.d. Accessed February 9, 2024. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rsu8hHtomtQ.
History
Enable pagination
rows per page
HTML diff
Side-by-side diff
Side-by-side diff by characters
Inline diff
Inline diff by characters
Full side-by-side diff
Full side-by-side diff by characters
Full inline diff
Full inline diff by characters
Unified diff
Side-by-side view
HTML diff
Side-by-side diff
Advanced
Information
Version
2024-02-23 19:15
admin
38
2024-02-23 19:08
admin
37
2024-02-23 18:44
admin
36
2024-02-23 18:34
admin
35
2024-02-21 13:21
admin
34
2024-02-20 22:42
admin
33
2024-02-20 22:41
admin
Page renamed from Manufacturing large dye sensitized solar cell glass at home laboratory to Manufacturing of Large Dye Sensitized Solar Cell at home. Semantic alias redirect created
32
2024-02-20 21:55
admin
31
2024-02-20 21:51
admin
30
2024-02-20 21:51
admin
29
2024-02-20 21:50
admin
28
2024-02-20 21:50
admin
27
2024-02-20 21:49
admin
26
2024-02-20 21:48
admin
25
2024-02-20 21:47
admin
24
2024-02-20 21:40
admin
23
2024-02-20 21:37
admin
22
2024-02-20 21:30
admin
21
2024-02-20 21:30
admin
20
2024-02-20 21:29
admin
19
2024-02-20 21:27
admin
18
2024-02-20 21:26
admin
17
2024-02-20 21:24
admin
16
2024-02-20 21:23
admin
img Plugin modified by editor.
15
2024-02-20 21:22
admin
14
Select action to perform with checked...
Remove
OK
«
1
(current)
2
»
Log In
Username:
Password:
I forgot my password
CapsLock is on.
Log in
Register
Stay in SSL mode
Menu
Home
Contact Us
Calendar
Wiki
Wiki Home
Last Changes
List Pages
Structures
Forums
List Forums
Rankings
File Galleries
List Galleries
Calendar
Today
D
W
M
11/24/2024 - 11/30/2024
SU
MO
TU
WE
TH
FR
SA
24
25
26
27
28
29
30