| Literature DB >> 31169936 |
Jingying Liu1, Babar Shabbir1,2, Chujie Wang1, Tao Wan3, Qingdong Ou1, Pei Yu1, Anton Tadich4,5, Xuechen Jiao1,4, Dewei Chu3, Dongchen Qi6, Dabing Li2, Ruifeng Kan2, Yamin Huang7, Yemin Dong7, Jacek Jasieniak1, Yupeng Zhang1, Qiaoliang Bao1.
Abstract
Metal halide perovskites represent a family of the most promising materials for fascinating photovoltaic and photodetector applications due to their unique optoelectronic properties and much needed simple and low-cost fabrication process. The high atomic number (Z) of their constituents and significantly higher carrier mobility also make perovskite semiconductors suitable for the detection of ionizing radiation. By taking advantage of that, the direct detection of soft-X-ray-induced photocurrent is demonstrated in both rigid and flexible detectors based on all-inorganic halide perovskite quantum dots (QDs) synthesized via a solution process. Utilizing a synchrotron soft-X-ray beamline, high sensitivities of up to 1450 µC Gyair -1 cm-2 are achieved under an X-ray dose rate of 0.0172 mGyair s-1 with only 0.1 V bias voltage, which is about 70-fold more sensitive than conventional α-Se devices. Furthermore, the perovskite film is printed homogeneously on various substrates by the inexpensive inkjet printing method to demonstrate large-scale fabrication of arrays of multichannel detectors. These results suggest that the perovskite QDs are ideal candidates for the detection of soft X-rays and for large-area flat or flexible panels with tremendous application potential in multidimensional and different architectures imaging technologies.Entities:
Keywords: flexible and printable X-ray detectors; ionizing radiation; perovskites; quantum dots; soft X-rays
Year: 2019 PMID: 31169936 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201901644
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849