Opportunities for
enhancing solar energy harvesting using photon
upconversion are reviewed. The increasing prominence of bifacial solar
cells is an enabling factor for the implementation of upconversion,
however, when the realistic constraints of current best-performing
silicon devices are considered, many challenges remain before silicon
photovoltaics operating under nonconcentrated sunlight can be enhanced
via lanthanide-based upconversion. A photophysical model reveals that
>1–2 orders of magnitude increase in the intermediate state
lifetime, energy transfer rate, or generation rate would be needed
before such solar upconversion could start to become efficient. Methods
to increase the generation rate such as the use of cosensitizers to
expand the absorption range and the use of plasmonics or photonic
structures are reviewed. The opportunities and challenges for these
approaches (or combinations thereof) to achieve efficient solar upconversion
are discussed. The opportunity for enhancing the performance of technologies
such as luminescent solar concentrators by combining upconversion
together with micro-optics is also reviewed. Triplet–triplet
annihilation-based upconversion is progressing steadily toward being
relevant to lower-bandgap solar cells. Looking toward photocatalysis,
photophysical modeling indicates that current blue-to-ultraviolet
lanthanide upconversion systems are very inefficient. However, hope
remains in this direction for organic upconversion enhancing the performance
of visible-light-active photocatalysts.
Triplet transfer across a surface-anchored metal-organic-framework heterojunction is demonstrated by the observation of triplet-triplet annihilation photon -upconversion in a sensitizer-emitter heterostructure. Upconversion thresholds under 1 mW cm are achieved. In the broader context, the double-electron-exchange mechanism of triplet transfer indicates that the heterojunction quality is sufficient for electrons to move between layers in this solution-processed crystalline heterostructure.
The first energetically conjoined TTA-assisted photon energy upconversion operating in cell tissue is described. The synthesized nanocapsules with the encapsulated UC dye system consisting of an emitter and a sensitizer show very efficient UC emission in aqueous dispersion under extremely low excitation intensity down to 0.05 W · cm(-2) so that tissue and cells are not affected by the excitation light. The demonstrated sub-linear intensity dependence of the UC emission is of crucial importance for life-science applications as the UC photon could serve as a local or in situ optical excitation source for subsequent light-triggered processes.
The energy stored in the triplet states of organic molecules, capable of energy transfer via an emissive process (phosphorescence) or a nonemissive process (triplet-triplet transfer), is actively dissipated in the presence of molecular oxygen. The reason is that photoexcited singlet oxygen is highly reactive, so the photoactive molecules in the system are quickly oxidized. Oxidation leads to further loss of efficiency and various undesirable side effects. In this work we have developed a structurally diverse library of hyperbranched unsaturated poly(phosphoester)s that allow efficient scavenging of singlet oxygen, but do not react with molecular oxygen in the ground state, i.e., triplet state. The triplet-triplet annihilation photon upconversion was chosen as a highly oxygen-sensitive process as proof for a long-term protection against singlet oxygen quenching, with comparable efficiencies of the photon upconversion under ambient conditions as in an oxygen-free environment in several unsaturated polyphosphates. The experimental results are further correlated to NMR spectroscopy and theoretical calculations evidencing the importance of the phosphate center. These results open a technological window toward efficient solar cells but also for sustainable solar upconversion devices, harvesting a broad-band sunlight excitation spectrum.
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