Bulk- and Flexo-Photovoltaic effects
· Invited
Abstract
Two years after the invention of modern prototype solar cells, it was found that BaTiO3exhibits a photovoltaic effect distinct from that of p-n junctions, later called the bulk photovoltaic (BPV) effect. Under uniform illumination, a homogeneous ferroelectric material gives rise to a short-circuit current and produces an anomalously large photo-voltage well exceeding the bandgap energy. The microscopic origins of this effect supposed to originate from the asymmetric distribution of photoexcited non-equilibrium carriers in k-space, caused by absence of centrosymmetry. The talk will present a short history and the basics of the bulk photovoltaic effect, tip enhancement, as well as the electronic origin of the anomalous BPV in some materials such as BiFeO3. Potential applications such as energy harvesting or light-induced reversible switching of ferroelectric polarization at room temperature will be adressed. I will show how the BPV effect may be used in optical switching tunnel junctions or other similar devices. Finally, I will discuss a new photovoltaic effect which turns the BPV effect into a universal effect allowed in all semiconductors by mediation of the flexoelectric effect. [M.-M. Yang D. J. Kim, & M. Alexe, Flexo-Photovoltaic Effect, Science 360, 904 (2018)]
*The work was partly supported by the EPSRC (UK) through Grant Nos. EP/M022706/1, EP/P031544/1 and EP/P025803/1
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Presenters
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Marin Alexe
- University of Warwick