Origami-inspired perovskite X-ray detector by printing and folding

X-ray detectors are of pivotal importance for the scientific and technological progress in a wide range of medical, industrial, and scientific applications. Here, we take advantage of the printability of perovskite-based semiconductors and achieve a high X-ray sensitivity combined with the potential...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Npj flexible electronics 2023-02, Vol.7 (1), p.9-8, Article 9
Hauptverfasser: Mescher, Henning, Schackmar, Fabian, Huber, Robert, Eggers, Helge, Zuber, Marcus, Hamann, Elias, Gramlich, Georg, Dangelmaier, Julian, Zhang, Qiaoshuang, Rösch, Andres Georg, Zwick, Thomas, Hernandez-Sosa, Gerardo, Paetzold, Ulrich W., Lemmer, Uli
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:X-ray detectors are of pivotal importance for the scientific and technological progress in a wide range of medical, industrial, and scientific applications. Here, we take advantage of the printability of perovskite-based semiconductors and achieve a high X-ray sensitivity combined with the potential of an exceptional high spatial resolution by our origami-inspired folded perovskite X-ray detector. The high performance of our device is reached solely by the folded detector architecture and does not require any photolithography. The design and fabrication of a foldable perovskite sensor array is presented and the detector is characterized as a planar and as a folded device. Exposed to 50 kVp−150 kVp X-ray radiation, the planar detector reaches X-ray sensitivities of 25−35  μ C/(Gy air cm 2 ), whereas the folded detector achieves remarkably increased X-ray sensitivities of several hundred μ C/(Gy air cm 2 ) and a record value of 1409  μ C/(Gy air cm 2 ) at 150 kVp without photoconductive gain. Finally, the potential of an exceptional high spatial resolution of the folded detector of more than 20 lp/mm under 150 kVp X-ray radiation is demonstrated.
ISSN:2397-4621
2397-4621
DOI:10.1038/s41528-023-00240-9