Issue 16, 2025

Ultrafast X-ray induced damage and nonthermal melting in cadmium sulfide

Abstract

Cadmium sulfide is a valuable material for solar cells, photovoltaic, and radiation detectors. It is thus important to evaluate the material damage mechanisms and damage threshold in response to irradiation. Here, we simulate the ultrafast XUV/X-ray irradiation of CdS with the combined model, XTANT-3. It accounts for nonequilibrium electronic and atomic dynamics, nonadiabatic coupling between the two systems, nonthermal melting and bond breaking due to electronic excitation. We find that the two phases of CdS, zinc blende and wurtzite, demonstrate very close damage threshold dose of ∼0.4–0.5 eV per atom. The damage is mainly thermal, whereas with increase of the dose, nonthermal effects begin to dominate leading to nonthermal melting. The transient disordered state is a high-density liquid, which may be semiconducting or metallic depending on the dose. Later recrystallization may recover the material back to the crystalline phase, or at high doses create an amorphous phase with variable bandgap. The revealed effects may potentially allow for controllable tuning of the band gap via laser irradiation of CdS.

Graphical abstract: Ultrafast X-ray induced damage and nonthermal melting in cadmium sulfide

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 Feb 2025
Accepted
31 Mar 2025
First published
31 Mar 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2025,27, 8230-8237

Ultrafast X-ray induced damage and nonthermal melting in cadmium sulfide

N. Medvedev and A. Artímez Peña, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2025, 27, 8230 DOI: 10.1039/D5CP00525F

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