Ultrafast X-ray interaction with photovoltaic materials: Thermal and nonthermal responses
Aldo Art\'imez Pe\~na, Nikita Medvedev

TL;DR
This study uses advanced modeling to explore how ultrafast X-ray pulses affect photovoltaic materials, revealing thermal and nonthermal damage thresholds, recovery processes, and potential for laser-based band gap engineering.
Contribution
It introduces the XTANT-3 multiscale model to simulate microscopic responses of CdTe, PbS, and ITO to ultrafast X-ray irradiation, highlighting new insights into damage mechanisms and recovery.
Findings
CdTe shows highest radiation resistance.
Damage thresholds increase with energy dissipation and recrystallization.
Transient superionic behavior observed in ITO.
Abstract
Cadmium telluride (CdTe), lead sulfide (PbS), and indium tin oxide (ITO) play crucial roles in various electronic applications where laser treatment enables precise modification of their distinctive electronic characteristics. This study utilizes the XTANT-3 hybrid/multiscale model to investigate the microscopic response of these materials to ultrafast X-ray irradiation. The model simultaneously traces intertwined processes of non-equilibrium dynamics of both electrons and atoms, nonadiabatic coupling, nonthermal melting, and bond breaking due to electronic excitation. Among the materials studied, CdTe exhibits the highest radiation resistance, similar to CdS. At the respective threshold doses, the melting is primarily thermal, driven by electron-phonon coupling, which is accompanied by the band gap closure. Additionally, all materials exhibit nonthermal melting at higher doses. When…
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