Adil Hossain, Muneef Hasan, Maruf Al Yeamin, Sheikh Joifullah, Mahfuzul Haque, Redi Kristian Pingak, Asif Hosen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The commercial suitability of lead halide perovskites is deprived by stability and toxicity concerns despite their extraordinary physiochemical features and improved power conversion efficiency. There is an increasing preference towards reliable and ecologically sustainable alternatives with comparable optical and electronic characteristics. For this purpose, our study is concerned with identifying physical characteristics like structural, electronic, mechanical, and optical characteristics of FrBF3 (B = Ge, Sn) under varying pressures up to 40 GPa. Both FrGeF3 and FrSnF3 have cubic crystal structures and their atomic bond length reduces with increasing pressure as lattice constant, and volume reduces with the application of hydrostatic pressure. They are structurally and mechanically stable in all the variations of pressure. Initially, both compounds have direct bandgap where FrGeF3 has 2.14 eV bandgap and FrSnF3 has 1.83 eV bandgap. The impact of pressure on band structure is notable as both compounds go through a linear transition from semiconductor to metal by concentrating electronic states at the Fermi level. The absorption, extinction coefficient, and optical conductivity also shift towards lower photon energy (redshift), which makes them viable options for solar cell development and optoelectronic devices under pressure as they can absorb photon energy of infrared and visible range. Besides, their mechanical features including elastic moduli, ductility, and anisotropy improve linearly with pressure. The findings of our study suggest that the perovskite FrBF3 (B = Ge, Sn) exhibits an excellent improvement of mechanical, electronic, and optical characteristics when introduced to hydrostatic pressure, making them suitable for many real-life applications such as photodetector, sensor, energy storage devices, solar panels and other optoelectronic devices.
期刊介绍:
Optical and Quantum Electronics provides an international forum for the publication of original research papers, tutorial reviews and letters in such fields as optical physics, optical engineering and optoelectronics. Special issues are published on topics of current interest.
Optical and Quantum Electronics is published monthly. It is concerned with the technology and physics of optical systems, components and devices, i.e., with topics such as: optical fibres; semiconductor lasers and LEDs; light detection and imaging devices; nanophotonics; photonic integration and optoelectronic integrated circuits; silicon photonics; displays; optical communications from devices to systems; materials for photonics (e.g. semiconductors, glasses, graphene); the physics and simulation of optical devices and systems; nanotechnologies in photonics (including engineered nano-structures such as photonic crystals, sub-wavelength photonic structures, metamaterials, and plasmonics); advanced quantum and optoelectronic applications (e.g. quantum computing, memory and communications, quantum sensing and quantum dots); photonic sensors and bio-sensors; Terahertz phenomena; non-linear optics and ultrafast phenomena; green photonics.