Scientists in Japan have developed a device that makes external magnetic cycling control of magnetic injection flow in the bulk photovoltaic effect (BPVE) possible, a phenomenon that is not yet used in commercial solar cells. The research suggests a potential path in the direction of regulating photo flow in photovoltaic applications of the next generation.
Researchers at Kyoto University in Japan have developed an artificial heterosexual structure that makes magnetic control of injection flow possible in BPVE, making it possible to use important barriers to their use in commercial solar cells.
The BPVE is a phenomenon in which a material generates a direct electric current when it is illuminated, even without a traditional PN junction or hetero junction. In contrast to the conventional photovoltaic effect, BPVE appears in one -phase, homogeneous materials that have no inversion symmetry.
“Another current comes out when there is a break in time-out symmetry, or the symmetry of physical laws when the time flow is reversed,” the scientists explained. “Because time-out symmetry is broken in magnetic materials, it is expected that new effects with regard to the BPVE will occur in magnetic systems, but many aspects of these systems remain both theoretical and experimental inexplicable.”
With this in mind, they created a Van der Waals (VDW) heterost structure that combines a Monolaag two -dimensional semiconductor on the basis of Molybendendisulfide (MOS₂) and a magnetic layered material made of chromium thiophosphate (CRPS₄). The configuration is designed to mimic broken spatial and time-in-terms symmetry.
The Monolaag Mos₂ and multi -layered CRPS₄ were mechanically examined from bulk some crystals. The Monolaag Mos₂ was then stacked on the CRPS₄ using a dry transfer method.
Image: Kyoto University, Nature, CC by 4.0
“The artificial Van der Waals (VDW) heterostructures manufactured by stacking 2D materials lead to the cause of the emerging periodicity of crystal structures such as moiré superlattice and offer us the new routes to regulate the p-symetry that regulate” the diekeer “van de disk.
The scientists used an external magnetic field to measure the current voltage characteristics of the device under light lighting, so that both temperature and spinning vary. They saw a finite spontaneous photo flow that changed with the external magnetic field below the wealth temperature – the point at which the magnetization of an antiferromagnetic material behavior changes.
The results showed that the magnetic injection flow of the device can be arranged by an external magnetic field, which the researchers called a breakthrough in BPVE examination.
“Our study has shown that spatial and time-in-life symmetry can be flexibly controlled by artificial structures, making a variety of optical reactions and current generation possible that have never been seen before,” said researcher Kazunari Matsuda. “This can lead to new applications, not only in solar cells, but also in technologies such as optical sensors, spintronics and energy harvest devices.”
The scientists described the new device in “Non-linear photovoltaic effects in Monolaag semiconductor and laminated magnetic material hetero interface with P– and T-Symmetry broken system“Which was recently published in Nature communication.
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