A low-temperature solution route for the synthesis of single crystals of BaSe3 and its photovoltaic study†
Abstract
Cadmium chalcogenides are excellent materials for solar cell applications but are also toxic. Thus, new environmentally friendly metal chalcogenides with good photovoltaic properties need to be developed for sustainable applications. Herein, we describe the preparation of red-colored crystals of BaSe3 using a low-temperature solution route for the first time. The BaSe3 structure was determined and refined using a single-crystal X-ray diffraction study. The tetragonal BaSe3 (space group: P21m) phase has cell constants of a = b = 7.2871(3) Å and c = 4.2516(3) Å. The chemical bonding in the BaSe3 structure can be described using the Zintl–Klemm concept. The Ba atoms of the structure donate electrons to the Se atoms to form the trimeric Se32− Zintl anions. We have investigated the physical properties of a polycrystalline BaSe3 sample, which was synthesized at high temperatures via a reaction of pure elements. The sample is a semiconductor with direct and indirect optical bandgap energies of 1.7(2) eV and 1.6(2) eV, respectively, as estimated using the Tauc plot method. The polycrystalline BaSe3 sample's total thermal conductivity (κtot) is 1.07 W m−1 K−1 near room temperature, which gradually drops to 0.47 W m−1 K−1 on heating the sample to 773 K. The photovoltaic studies of the material, BaSe3, show a 20.4% increment in efficiency with its inclusion in the TiO2/CdS photoanode due to enhanced light-harvesting and suppressed recombination at the photoanode/electrolyte interface.