Issue 1, 2015

Photochemical upconversion: present status and prospects for its application to solar energy conversion

Abstract

All photovoltaic solar cells transmit photons with energies below the absorption threshold (bandgap) of the absorber material, which are therefore usually lost for the purpose of solar energy conversion. Upconversion (UC) devices can harvest this unused sub-threshold light behind the solar cell, and create one higher energy photon out of (at least) two transmitted photons. This higher energy photon is radiated back towards the solar cell, thus expanding the utilization of the solar spectrum. Key requirements for UC units are a broad absorption and high UC quantum yield under low-intensity incoherent illumination, as relevant to solar energy conversion devices, as well as long term photostability. Upconversion by triplet–triplet annihilation (TTA) in organic chromophores has proven to fulfil the first two basic requirements, and first proof-of-concept applications in photovoltaic conversion as well as photo(electro)chemical energy storage have been demonstrated. Here we review the basic concept of TTA-UC and its application in the field of solar energy harvesting, and assess the challenges and prospects for its large-scale application, including the long term photostability of TTA upconversion materials.

Graphical abstract: Photochemical upconversion: present status and prospects for its application to solar energy conversion

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
05 Aug 2014
Accepted
18 Nov 2014
First published
18 Nov 2014

Energy Environ. Sci., 2015,8, 103-125

Author version available

Photochemical upconversion: present status and prospects for its application to solar energy conversion

T. F. Schulze and T. W. Schmidt, Energy Environ. Sci., 2015, 8, 103 DOI: 10.1039/C4EE02481H

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