| Literature DB >> 28654012 |
Giuseppe Luongo1,2, Filippo Giubileo3, Luca Genovese4, Laura Iemmo5, Nadia Martucciello6, Antonio Di Bartolomeo7,8.
Abstract
We study the effect of temperature and light on the I-V and C-V characteristics of a graphene/silicon Schottky diode. The device exhibits a reverse-bias photocurrent exceeding the forward current and achieves a photoresponsivity as high as 2.5 A / W . We show that the enhanced photocurrent is due to photo-generated carriers injected in the graphene/Si junction from the parasitic graphene/SiO₂/Si capacitor connected in parallel to the diode. The same mechanism can occur with thermally generated carriers, which contribute to the high leakage current often observed in graphene/Si junctions.Entities:
Keywords: MOS capacitor; Schottky barrier; graphene; photocurrent; photodiode
Year: 2017 PMID: 28654012 PMCID: PMC5535224 DOI: 10.3390/nano7070158
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1(a) Schematic view of the device and (b) equivalent circuit; (c) I-V characteristic of the Gr/Si junction for decreasing temperature from to . The temperature values listed in the figure are measured with an error of . The inset shows the I-V characteristic at in linear scale; (d) Richardson plot of versus .
Figure 2Cheung’s plot of (a) dV/dln(I) versus I and (b) H(I) vs. I. (c) Temperature dependence of ideality factor and barrier height. (d) Room-temperature I-V characteristics of the Gr/Si junction under different illumination levels from a white LED array. (e,f) Dynamic measurement of the photocurrent at reverse bias and light intensity of , showing a time response with rise and fall time of , corresponding to the time resolution of the source-measurement unit.
Figure 3(a) Band diagram of the n-type Si substrate along the surface below the Gr/SiO2/Si MOS capacitor and the Gr/Si diode, showing that diffusion of photogenerated holes towards the diode area is energetically favored. Band diagram of the Gr/Si junction in (b) forward and (c) reverse bias (the thin tunneling SiO2 interfacial layer is omitted).
Figure 4(a) Small-signal ( and ) C-V measurements in dark and under different illumination levels. The inset highlights a crossover point between two regions where the capacitance of the device is dominated by the Schottky diode () and the MOS capacitor , respectively. (b) plot of the device under study.