| Literature DB >> 28176284 |
Yanping Liu1,2, Qinglin Xia1, Jun He1, Zongwen Liu3.
Abstract
Ultrafast and broad spectral bandwidth photodetectors are desirable attributable to their unique bandstructures. Photodetectors based on graphene have great potential due to graphene's outstanding optical and electrical properties. However, the highest reported values of the photoresponsivity of pure graphene are less than 10 mA/W at room temperature, which significantly limits its potential applications. Here, we report a photoresponsivity of 32 A/W in pure monolayer graphene photodetectors, an improvement of over one order of magnitude for functional graphene nanostructures (<3 A/W). The high photocurrent generation in our devices can be attributed to the high sensitivity of graphene's resistivity to a local change of the electric field induced by photo-excited carriers generated in the light-doping substrate. This dramatically increases the feasibility of using graphene for the next generation of photodetectors.Entities:
Keywords: Graphene; Lightly p-doped substrate; Photodetector; Photoresponsivity
Year: 2017 PMID: 28176284 PMCID: PMC5296271 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-017-1827-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1Electrical characteristics of our pure graphene photodetector. a. The characteristic Raman spectrum of the sample. b Back-gate voltage dependence of the current–voltage (I–V) characteristics of the graphene photodetector. c The source-drain current dependence of the back-gate voltage characteristics (transfer curve) of sample A. d The source-drain current versus the back-gate voltage bias of sample B
Fig. 2Optical characteristics of our pure graphene photodetector. a Time-dependent photocurrent measurements of sample A with a back-gate bias voltage of V = − 1V when optically pumped in the visible range (532 nm). The photodetector shows high photoresponses of approximately 1.15 AW−1 under the biased condition at room temperature. b The response time of the measured in one period of modulation with the laser illumination. c Photoresponse dependence on the laser spot size. d A schematic illustration of the positive charge accumulation at the interface of Si/SiO2 under light illumination without source-drain voltage bias, which effectively changes the back-gate voltage and induces a photocurrent
Fig. 3Photocurrent as a function of source-drain voltage. Time-dependent photocurrent measurements of our graphene photodetector with a positive (a) and negative (b) source-drain bias. These results indicate that the photocurrent can be tuned via a bias of source-drain voltage, indicating that a higher photocurrent can be readily obtained by applying a larger positive source-drain voltage
Fig. 4Photoresponsivity dependence on the biased source-drain voltage. a The gate voltage dependence of the photoresponsivity characteristics on the source-drain bias voltage. The decrease of the photocurrent with an increase of the gate voltage originates from the doping induced by the internal electric field. b and c present the source-drain voltage dependence of the external gain and photoresponsivity respectively without the substrate effect
Fig. 5Photoresponsivity dependence on the back-gate voltage. The source-drain voltage dependence of the photocurrent of our graphene photodetector with a positive (a) and negative (b) back-gate bias voltage (−12 V ≤ Vg ≤ 12 V). These results indicate that the photocurrent can be tuned via the back-gate bias voltage. The increasing photocurrent with the decreasing back-gate voltage arises from the hole impact ionization effect with respect to the external electric field. As the gate bias decreases, more holes are involved in the impact ionization process to generate more electron–hole pairs. c Photoresponsivity and gain dependence versus back-gate bias voltage. A high photoresponsivity of 1.35 AW−1 is achieved at a V G voltage of −12 V