In comparison to the lead halide perovskites, nowadays, lead-free halide perovskites have demonstrated a number of benefits, including efficient optical absorption, increased stability, variable bandgap, excellent mobility of carriers, non-toxicity, abundant raw ingredients, and low manufacturing cost. The use of the Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof (PBE) and Heyd-Scuseria-Ernzerhof (HSE) hybrid functional inside the quantum espresso software allowed for a thorough examination of these materials, potentially leading to improvements in the development of ecologically acceptable and economically sustainable perovskite-based products. This work has extensively examined the effects of compressive and tensile strain on the structural, optical, and electronic characteristics of the inorganic cubic perovskite SrAsX (X = F, Cl, Br) with varying X anion using first-principles density-functional theory (FP-DFT). At the point, the unstrained SrAsF, SrAsCl, and SrAsBr compounds have a direct bandgap of 1.68/2.50 eV, 1.65/2.47 eV, and 1.522/2.30 eV, respectively, from the PBE/HSE methods. A drop in bandgap values occurs when the X-anion switches from F to Cl to Br. Furthermore, the bandgaps of the three proposed structures show a minor increase in response to tensile strain and a decreasing prevalence in response to compressive strain. The optical properties, which include dielectric functions, absorption coefficient, and electron loss function, are consistent with the band characteristics of these components, all of which point to a significant capability for absorption in the visible region. The dielectric constants of SrAsF, SrAsCl, and SrAsBr are discovered to have peaks that, with compressive strain, redshift (move towards lower photon energy) and, under tensile strain, blueshift (move towards upper photon energy). In comparison to the compounds SrAsF and SrAsCl, the parameters indicate that the material SrAsBr is more optically advantageous. The SCAPS-1D simulator was used to methodically examine the photovoltaic (PV) performance of novel cell topologies that included SnS as an electron transport layer (ETL) and SrAsF, SrAsCl, and SrAsBr as absorbers and primarily 19.76, 19.89, and 20.89% PCE was achieved, respectively.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4cp03286a | DOI Listing |
Virus Genes
January 1997
Department of Microbiology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia 19104, USA.
The nucleotide sequence of the gene for the envelope protein gp85 (SU) of the Schmidt-Ruppin subgroup A (NY) strain of Rous sarcoma virus [SRA(NY)] was determined, and the deduced amino acid sequence was compared with those of other avian sarcoma-leukosis viruses. Among the five host-range determinant sequences (vr1, vr2, hr1, hr2, and vr3), the host-range determinant sequence hr2 of SRA(NY) showed a significant deviation from the hr2 sequences of other subgroup A viruses namely, RAV-1 and SRA(SF). A phylogenetic analysis of the amino acid sequence of this region indicated that this intra-subgroup diversity was as great as or even greater than the inter-subgroup diversity found among other subgroups of ASLV.
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