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Cited 46 time in webofscience Cited 43 time in scopus
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Enhancing electron transport through metal oxide adjustments in perovskite solar cells and their suitability for X-ray detection

Authors
Li, XinAftab, SikandarLiu, HailiangVikraman, DhanasekaranHussain, SajjadAl-Kahtani, Abdullah A.Koyyada, GaneshKang, JungwonAkman, Erdi
Issue Date
Aug-2024
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Keywords
Charge Transfer; Conversion Efficiency; Crystallinity; Electron Transport Properties; Manganese Oxide; Medical Imaging; Optoelectronic Devices; Perovskite; Perovskite Solar Cells; Dark Current Densities; Electron Transport; Electron Transport Layers; Film-forming; Metal-oxide; Methyl Esters; Performance; Planar Architecture; X-ray Detections; X-ray Detector; X Ray Detectors
Citation
Journal of Materials Chemistry A, v.12, no.33, pp 22310 - 22324
Pages
15
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Journal of Materials Chemistry A
Volume
12
Number
33
Start Page
22310
End Page
22324
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/22922
DOI
10.1039/d4ta03785e
ISSN
2050-7488
2050-7496
Abstract
For perovskite solar cells (PSCs) with inverted planar architectures, the widely used (6,6)-phenyl-C61 butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM), as an electron transport layer (ETL), shows drawbacks such as poor film-forming and undesirable charge transfer ability. Herein, different metal oxides, including vanadium oxide (V2O5), manganese dioxide (MnO2), and magnesium(ii) oxide (MgO), are introduced into the PCBM ETL layer of PSCs with an FA0.5MA0.5PbI3 active layer, which increases the intensity of photoluminescence, carrier lifetime and crystallinity of the perovskite film. Moreover, results for the modified ETL are extrapolated to X-ray detectors. The study sheds light on metal oxide dopant sources of the ETL in PSCs employing various physical and chemical characterization techniques. Among these metal oxides, MgO stands out as a crucial dopant that optimizes the ETL and yields a peak power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 15.12% at 2 wt% MgO. The performance of X-ray detectors is then closely examined, and it is found that the MgO-doped ETL increases sensitivity, decreases dark current, and improves charge collection efficiency. MgO (2 wt%) is found to be the ideal balance for better X-ray detector performance based on concentration-dependent analyses. The study presents comprehensive collected charge density (CCD) and dark current density (DCD) characteristics (CCD-DCD), showing that the MgO-doped ETL performs better than its counterparts with V2O5 and MnO2, with a sensitivity of 4.49 mA Gy-1 cm-2 at 2 wt% MgO and a CCD-DCD of 15 mu A cm-2. These results highlight the versatility of MgO as a dopant, improving the performance of PSCs and X-ray detectors while providing insightful information for cutting-edge electronic devices in applications such as next-generation optoelectronic devices and medical imaging technologies. Inverted planar perovskite solar cells with PCBM ETL have poor film formation and charge transfer. Adding MgO improves photoluminescence, carrier lifetime, and efficiency to 15.12%, and enhances X-ray detector performance.
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