One-dimensional nanostructure
arrays hold great promise for orthogonalizing
light absorption and carrier collection, and thus have been attractive
building blocks for next-generation solar cells. Therefore, it is
highly desired to build one-dimensional nanostructure arrays of novel
photovoltaic materials. In this work, for the first time, the ternary
BiSI nanorod arrays have been successfully fabricated on a tungsten
substrate for application in solar cells. These nanorods have an oriented
growth along the [001] direction. The UV–vis–NIR absorption
results demonstrate that the prepared BiSI nanorods exhibit a continuous
strong absorption in the entire visible light region with an indirect
band gap of 1.57 eV. A solid-state solar-cell device utilizing the
as-grown BiSI nanorod arrays as the n-type absorber layer and CuSCN
as the p-type window layer is also developed. The assembled solar-cell
device can reach a power conversion efficiency of 0.66% with a fill
factor of 52.81%. Therefore, the present study reveals the potential
of BiSI nanorod arrays as absorber materials for application in low-cost
solar cells.
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A magnetoelectric (ME) laminate composite consisting of a new cut type [(zxtw)−129°∕30°] piezoelectric LiNbO3 single crystal and the magnetostrictive Tb1−xDyxFe2−y has been developed and its ME effect has been studied. Our small laminate shows a superior ME voltage coefficient (αE). A wide bandwidth of the frequency peak under a fixed magnetic bias field and a wide bandwidth of optimized magnetic bias field under a high fixed frequency were also observed. The largest value of αE is 2.31V∕cmOe at 160kHz when the magnetic bias field reaches 1.76kOe.
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