# Proposed high-power beta cells from MgAlB14-type icosahedral-boron   semiconductors

**Authors:** David Emin

arXiv: 1904.10854 · 2019-06-13

## TL;DR

This paper proposes using MgAlB14-type icosahedral boron-rich semiconductors to create high-power beta cells capable of generating significantly more electricity from nuclear decays due to their self-healing properties and improved charge carrier dynamics.

## Contribution

It introduces a novel approach to enhance beta cell power output by utilizing boron-rich semiconductors with self-healing and favorable electron-phonon interactions.

## Key findings

- Potential for orders-of-magnitude higher power output.
- Self-healing property reduces radiation damage.
- Enhanced efficiency through polaron dynamics.

## Abstract

Beta cells generate electric power as carrier-producing beta irradiation from incorporated radioisotopes bombard a series of p-n-junctions. However, radiation damage to the semiconductors commonly used in solar cells limits beta cells to extremely weak irradiations that generate concomitantly miniscule electric powers, e.g. micro-Watts. By contrast, beta cells that generate many orders-of-magnitude larger powers are possible with icosahedral boron-rich semiconductors since their bombardment-induced atomic displacements spontaneously self-heal. Furthermore, substitutions for Mg and Al atoms of icosahedral-boron-rich semiconductors based on the MgAlB14 structure can produce p-n junctions as electron transfers from doping-induced interstitial extra-icosahedral atoms convert some normally p-type materials to n-type. Moreover, electron-phonon interactions of the resulting readily displaceable interstitial cations with charge carriers foster their forming large polarons. Oppositely charged polarons repel one another at short range. These repulsions suppress the recombination of n-type with p-type polarons thereby increasing the beta-cell efficiency. All told, use of these icosahedral boron-rich semiconductors could enable beta cells with electric powers that are many orders of magnitude larger than those of existing beta cells. This development opens a new avenue for generating electricity from nuclear decays.

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.10854