Publication: Comparative Analysis of Characteristics of Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells Utilizing Extracts of Young vs Mature Leaves of Elaeocarpus Serratus as Natural Sensitizers
Type:
Article
Date
2024-10
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
SLIIT, Faculty of Engineering
Abstract
This study addresses the pressing global need for sustainable energy sources by exploring dyesensitized
solar cells (DSSCs) as a viable alternative. Specifically, the research focuses on extracting
natural pigments from Elaeocarpus serratus (Sri Lankan olive) leaves to enhance the efficiency of
DSSCs. These leaves undergo color changes as they mature, presenting opportunities to extract different
types of pigments at different ages. Extraction involves boiling pieces of leaves in absolute ethanol to
obtain the desired pigments. Further characterization via UV-visible spectroscopy revealed the presence
of different absorption bands of pigments in the natural dyes’ extracts.
The constructed DSSCs employed these natural dyes, coated on TiO2 films deposited on FTO
glass plates as the photoanodes. The liquid electrolyte was I2/I3
- and a platinum-sputtered glass plate
served as the counter electrode. Photovoltaic characteristics were evaluated using a computerized PK-IV
100 I-V analyzer under 100 W/m2 illumination.
Results indicated the superior performance of DSSCs utilizing young leaf extracts, yielding a
short circuit current density (JSC) of 3.950 mA/cm2, open circuit voltage (VOC) of 458.8 mV, and a fill
factor (ff) of approximately 0.553 with an efficiency (η) of 1.003%. Conversely, DSSCs utilizing.
Mature green leaf extracts exhibited lower performance metrics, with JSC of 2.379 mA/cm2, VOC of 477.5
mV, ff around 0.492, and η of 0.559%. Therefore, the efficiency of DSSC fabricated with young leaf is
56% higher than the DSSC made with mature green leaf extract.
Description
Keywords
Elaeocarpus serratus, Natural Pigment, Dye-Sensitized Solar Cell, Sri Lankan olive
