| Literature DB >> 30714726 |
Mingsheng Long1,2, Yang Wang1, Peng Wang1,2, Xiaohao Zhou1,2, Hui Xia1,2, Chen Luo3, Shenyang Huang4, Guowei Zhang4, Hugen Yan4, Zhiyong Fan5, Xing Wu3, Xiaoshuang Chen1,2, Wei Lu1,2, Weida Hu1,2.
Abstract
A long-wavelength infrared photodetector based on two-dimensional materials working at room temperature would have wide applications in many aspects in remote sensing, thermal imaging, biomedical optics, and medical imaging. However, sub-bandgap light detection in graphene and black phosphorus has been a long-standing scientific challenge because of their low photoresponsivity, instability in the air, and high dark current. In this study, we report a highly sensitive, air-stable, and operable long-wavelength infrared photodetector at room temperature based on PdSe2 phototransistors and their heterostructure. A high photoresponsivity of ∼42.1 AW-1 (at 10.6 μm) was demonstrated, which is an order of magnitude higher than the current record of platinum diselenide. Moreover, the dark current and noise power density were suppressed effectively by fabricating a van der Waals heterostructure. This work fundamentally contributes to establishing long-wavelength infrared detection by PdSe2 at the forefront of long-IR two-dimensional-materials-based photonics.Entities:
Keywords: detectivity; heterostructure; long-wavelength infrared; palladium diselenide; photodetector; photoresponsivity
Year: 2019 PMID: 30714726 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.8b09476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881