Are you an EPFL student looking for a semester project?
Work with us on data science and visualisation projects, and deploy your project as an app on top of Graph Search.
Detection and direct power conversion of high energy and high intensity ionizing radiation could be a key element in next generation nuclear reactor safety systems and space-born devices. For example, the Fukushima catastrophe in 2011 could have been largely prevented if 1% of the reactor's remnant radiation (gamma-rays of the nuclear fission) were directly converted within the reactor to electricity to power the water cooling circuit. It is reported here that the hybrid halide perovskite methylammonium lead triiodide could perfectly play the role of a converter. Single crystals were irradiated by a typical shut-down gamma-spectrum of a nuclear reactor with 7.61 x 10(14) Bq activity exhibit a high-efficiency of gamma-ray to free charge carrier conversion with radiation hardening. The power density of 0.3 mW/kg of methylammonium lead triiodide at 50 Sv/h means a four times higher efficiency than that for silicon-based cells. The material was stable to the limits of the experiment without changing its performance up to 100 Sv/h dose rate and 57 Sv H*(10) ambient total gamma-dose. Moreover, the gamma-shielding performance of methylammonium lead triiodide was found to be superior to both ordinary and barite concrete.
Andreas Pautz, Vincent Pierre Lamirand, Oskari Ville Pakari
Andreas Pautz, Vincent Pierre Lamirand, Oskari Ville Pakari
Andreas Pautz, Vincent Pierre Lamirand, Oskari Ville Pakari, Pavel Frajtag, Tom Mager