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Cited 23 time in webofscience Cited 24 time in scopus
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Cellulose acetate-derived ternary-doped hierarchically porous carbons blended perovskite active layers for solar cells and X-ray detectorsopen access

Authors
Nazir, GhazanfarLiu, HailiangRehman, AdeelaHussain, SajjadVikraman, DhanasekaranAftab, SikandarHeo, KwangIkram, MuhammadAlObaid, Abeer A.Kang, Jungwon
Issue Date
Jul-2023
Publisher
Elsevier
Keywords
Hierarchical porous carbons; Heteroatom doping; Solar cell; X-ray detector; Performance and stability
Citation
Surfaces and Interfaces, v.39, pp 1 - 14
Pages
14
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Surfaces and Interfaces
Volume
39
Start Page
1
End Page
14
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/21185
DOI
10.1016/j.surfin.2023.102945
ISSN
2468-0230
2468-0230
Abstract
Herein, we have synthesized hetero-atoms (nitrogen (N), sulfur (S), phosphorus (P))-doped porous carbons (PCs) which upon dispersion in perovskite precursor solution with different (2-8 wt.%) modify its morphology and improve optoelectronic characteristics of the perovskite active layer (AL) results into enhancing efficiency and stability of perovskite solar cells (PSCs). The results indicate that PCs (6 wt.%) modifies perovskite AL-constructed PSCs and X-ray photodetectors outperform other investigated devices. The excellent PSCs (AL@NSPCPC) demonstrate power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 13.81%, fill factor (FF) 64.77%, current density Jsc (23.518 mA/cm(2)), and open circuit voltage Voc (0.906 V), which is significantly higher than pristine AL 10.42%, 57.01%, 20.423 mA/cm(2), and 0.895 V, respectively. Furthermore, the sample (AL@NSP-CPC) when constructs in the geometry of an X-ray photodetector, shows 15.56 mu A/cm(2), 4.66 mA/Gy center dot cm(2), 5.26x10 4 cm(2)/V center dot s, and 3.58 x 10(15) cm(-3) of collected charge density (CCD), dark current density (DCD), sensitivity, mobility, and trap density, respectively. Thus, heteroatom-doped PCs modified perovskite layers demonstrate promise for constructing PSCs and X-ray photodetectors opening future research in exploiting these abundant, and inexpensive carbons materials having large mobility and tunable morphology along with surface passivation at perovskite/hole transport layer (HTL) interface to further enhance their photovoltaic parameters.
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