“…Many chemical groups like homoleptic dyes (N3, N719, N749) developed by Grätzel [5,6] heteroleptic sensitizers (Z907, K19, K77), ruthenium polypyridyl complexes, and organic dyes (triphenylamine, carbazole, phenothiazine) have recorded encouraging efficiencies up to 10-12 %. The high cost and environmental harms of these dyes turned the attention toward natural pigments like anthocyanins, chlorophylls, and hypericin [7][8][9] extracted from plant leaves, roots, flowers, seeds, and fruits [10][11][12][13][14][15][16]. In spite of natural dyes low efficiencies compared to ruthenium complexes, they attracted the attention of many researchers working on enhancing their performance by studying the effect of various factors in the extraction process, such as drying, grinding, temperature, anchorage time, and using different compounds of solvents [17,18].…”