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May 16, 2025

Finely-tuned TiO₂ nanorod arrays enhance solar cell efficiency

Schematic diagram of VSD model. The performance of CuInS2 solar cells. Credit: CAO Wenbo
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Schematic diagram of VSD model. The performance of CuInS2 solar cells. Credit: CAO Wenbo

A research team led by Prof. Wang Mingtai at the Hefei Institutes of 鶹Ժical Science of the Chinese Academy of Sciences has developed a finely tuned method for growing titanium dioxide nanorod arrays (TiO2-NA) with controllable spacing without changing individual rod size and demonstrated its application in high-performance solar cells.

Their findings, published in , offer a new toolkit for crafting nanostructures across clean energy and optoelectronics.

Single-crystalline TiO2 nanorods excel at harvesting light and conducting charge, making them ideal for solar cells, photocatalysts, and sensors. However, traditional fabrication methods link rod density, diameter, and length—if one parameter is adjusted, the others shift accordingly, often affecting device efficiency.

In this study, by carefully extending the hydrolysis stage of a precursor film, the team showed that longer "gel chains" assemble into smaller anatase nanoparticles. When the anatase film is subjected to hydrothermal treatment, those anatase nanoparticles convert in situ into rutile ones, serving as seeds for nanorod growth. The hydrolysis stage provides an effective way to control the rod density without altering the dimensions.

Using this strategy, they produced TiO2-NA films with constant rod diameter and height, even as the number of rods per area varied. When incorporated into low-temperature-processed CuInS2 , these films achieved power conversion efficiencies above 10%, peaking at 10.44 %.

Schematic illustration of the TiO2-NA preparation technology, growth principles, solar cell structure, and carrier generation model. Credit: CAO Wenbo
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Schematic illustration of the TiO2-NA preparation technology, growth principles, solar cell structure, and carrier generation model. Credit: CAO Wenbo

To explain why spacing matters so profoundly, the team introduced a Volume-Surface-Density model, clarifying how rod density influences light trapping, charge separation, and carrier collection.

This study overcomes the limitations of traditional methods for regulating nanostructures by establishing a complete system linking "macro-process regulation–microstructure evolution–device performance optimization."

More information: Wenbo Cao et al, Unveiling Growth and Photovoltaic Principles in Density‐Controllable TiO2 Nanorod Arrays for Efficient Solar Cells, Small Methods (2025).

Journal information: Small Methods

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A method enabling independent control of TiO2 nanorod array spacing without altering rod size allows precise tuning of nanostructures for solar cells. This approach maintains constant rod diameter and height while varying density, resulting in power conversion efficiencies exceeding 10%. The findings clarify how rod density affects light harvesting and charge transport.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.