| Literature DB >> 33569955 |
Yaping Ma1,2, Xiji Shao3, Jing Li2,4, Bowei Dong5, Zhenliang Hu6, Qiulan Zhou7, Haomin Xu2, Xiaoxu Zhao8, Hanyan Fang2, Xinzhe Li2, Zejun Li2, Jing Wu4,9, Meng Zhao9, Stephen John Pennycook8, Chorng Haur Sow6, Chengkuo Lee5, Yu Lin Zhong10, Junpeng Lu11, Mengning Ding7, Kedong Wang3, Ying Li1, Jiong Lu2,4.
Abstract
Platinum dichalcogenide (PtX2), an emergent group-10 transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) has shown great potential in infrared photonic and optoelectronic applications due to its layer-dependent electronic structure with potentially suitable bandgap. However, a scalable synthesis of PtSe2 and PtTe2 atomic layers with controlled thickness still represents a major challenge in this field because of the strong interlayer interactions. Herein, we develop a facile cathodic exfoliation approach for the synthesis of solution-processable high-quality PtSe2 and PtTe2 atomic layers for high-performance infrared (IR) photodetection. As-exfoliated PtSe2 and PtTe2 bilayer exhibit an excellent photoresponsivity of 72 and 1620 mA W-1 at zero gate voltage under a 1540 nm laser illumination, respectively, approximately several orders of magnitude higher than that of the majority of IR photodetectors based on graphene, TMDs, and black phosphorus. In addition, our PtSe2 and PtTe2 bilayer device also shows a decent specific detectivity of beyond 109 Jones with remarkable air-stability (>several months), outperforming the mechanically exfoliated counterparts under the laser illumination with a similar wavelength. Moreover, a high yield of PtSe2 and PtTe2 atomic layers dispersed in solution also allows for a facile fabrication of air-stable wafer-scale IR photodetector. This work demonstrates a new route for the synthesis of solution-processable layered materials with the narrow bandgap for the infrared optoelectronic applications.Entities:
Keywords: IR photodetectors; air-stable; bilayer PtSe2; bilayer PtTe2; electrochemical exfoliation
Year: 2021 PMID: 33569955 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c20535
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229