Templated synthesis of CsPbBr3 nanowire arrays toward low dark current drift and stable X-ray detectors†
Abstract
All-inorganic halide perovskite CsPbBr3 with superior environmental stability, remarkable radiation hardness and great defect tolerance has emerged as a competitive material in radiation detection. However, the operational stability of CsPbBr3 based detectors remains a problem due to their unstable electrical properties. Perovskite nanowires with a preferred orientation show greater accessibility compared with their single-crystal partners that undergo time-consuming growth. However, the synthesis of perovskite nanowire arrays with excellent stability, tunable distribution arrangements and adjustable compositions has been a major challenge. Herein, CsPbBr3 perovskite columnar crystal films with a controlled diameter (50–400 nm) are successfully synthesized with porous anodic aluminum oxide (AAO) templates. The passivated surface between AAO and CsPbBr3 nanowires resulted in reduced ion migration and stable operation performance. The CsPbBr3 based X-ray detectors display a low dark current drift of 2.185 × 10−6 nA cm−1 s−1 V−1, a high resistivity of 3.946 × 1011 Ω cm and a detection limit of 3.70 μGyair s−1 with an AAO pore size of 50 nm. This work establishes a suitable method to synthesize all-inorganic perovskite nanowires with controlled diameters for stable X-ray detection performance.