1 research outputs found
A Versatile Thin-Film Deposition Method for Multidimensional Semiconducting Bismuth Halides
Despite the significant
progress in fabricating hybrid organic–inorganic
lead halide perovskite solar cells, their toxicity and low stability
remain as major drawbacks, thereby hindering large-scale commercialization.
Given the isoelectronic nature of lead(II) and bismuth(III) ions,
potentially stable and nontoxic alternatives for efficient light absorption
in thin-film photovoltaic (PV) devices may be found among bismuth-based
halide semiconductors. However, high-quality polycrystalline films
of many of these systems have not been demonstrated. Here we present
a versatile and facile two-step coevaporation approach to fabricate
A<sub>3</sub>Bi<sub>2</sub>I<sub>9</sub> (A = Cs, Rb) and AgBi<sub>2</sub>I<sub>7</sub> polycrystalline films with smooth, pinhole-free
morphology and average grain size of >200 nm. The process involves
an initial two-source evaporation step (involving CsI, RbI or AgI,
and BiI<sub>3</sub> sources), followed by an annealing step under
BiI<sub>3</sub> vapor. The structural, optical, and electrical characteristics
of the resulting thin films are studied by X-ray diffraction, optical
spectroscopy, X-ray/UV photoelectron spectroscopy, and scanning electron
microscopy
