Ultrafast Recombination Dynamics in Dye-Sensitized SnO2/TiO2 Core/Shell Films
Author(s) -
Melissa K. Gish,
Alexander M. Lapides,
M. Kyle Brennaman,
Joseph L. Templeton,
Thomas J. Meyer,
John M. Papanikolas
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.563
H-Index - 203
ISSN - 1948-7185
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpclett.6b02388
Subject(s) - picosecond , photoexcitation , chromophore , ultrafast laser spectroscopy , recombination , photochemistry , electron , materials science , absorption (acoustics) , ultrashort pulse , chemical physics , core (optical fiber) , electron transfer , chemistry , molecular physics , atomic physics , optics , physics , laser , biochemistry , quantum mechanics , composite material , gene , excited state
Interfacial dynamics are investigated in SnO 2 /TiO 2 core/shell films derivatized with a Ru(II)-polypyridyl chromophore ([Ru II (bpy) 2 (4,4'-(PO 3 H 2 ) 2 bpy)] 2+ , RuP) using transient absorption methods. Electron injection from the chromophore into the TiO 2 shell occurs within a few picoseconds after photoexcitation. Loss of the oxidized dye through recombination occurs across time scales spanning 10 orders of magnitude. The majority (60%) of charge recombination events occur shortly after injection (τ = 220 ps), while a small fraction (≤20%) of the oxidized chromophores persists for milliseconds. The lifetime of long-lived charge-separated states (CSS) depends exponentially on shell thickness, suggesting that the injected electrons reside in the SnO 2 core and must tunnel through the TiO 2 shell to recombine with oxidized dyes. While the core/shell architecture extends the lifetime in a small fraction of the CSS, making water oxidation possible, the subnanosecond recombination process has profound implications for the overall efficiencies of dye-sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cells (DSPECs).
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