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Journal ArticleDOI

Photovoltage field-effect transistors

Valerio Adinolfi, +1 more
- 16 Feb 2017 - 
- Vol. 542, Iss: 7641, pp 324-327
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TLDR
A photovoltage field-effect transistor that uses silicon for charge transport, but is also sensitive to infrared light owing to the use of a quantum dot light absorber, and shows that colloidal quantum dots can be used as an efficient platform for silicon-based infrared detection, competitive with state-of-the-art epitaxial semiconductors.
Abstract
The detection of infrared radiation enables night vision, health monitoring, optical communications and three-dimensional object recognition. Silicon is widely used in modern electronics, but its electronic bandgap prevents the detection of light at wavelengths longer than about 1,100 nanometres. It is therefore of interest to extend the performance of silicon photodetectors into the infrared spectrum, beyond the bandgap of silicon. Here we demonstrate a photovoltage field-effect transistor that uses silicon for charge transport, but is also sensitive to infrared light owing to the use of a quantum dot light absorber. The photovoltage generated at the interface between the silicon and the quantum dot, combined with the high transconductance provided by the silicon device, leads to high gain (more than 104 electrons per photon at 1,500 nanometres), fast time response (less than 10 microseconds) and a widely tunable spectral response. Our photovoltage field-effect transistor has a responsivity that is five orders of magnitude higher at a wavelength of 1,500 nanometres than that of previous infrared-sensitized silicon detectors. The sensitization is achieved using a room-temperature solution process and does not rely on traditional high-temperature epitaxial growth of semiconductors (such as is used for germanium and III-V semiconductors). Our results show that colloidal quantum dots can be used as an efficient platform for silicon-based infrared detection, competitive with state-of-the-art epitaxial semiconductors.

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Citations
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Progress, Challenges, and Opportunities for 2D Material Based Photodetectors

TL;DR: A review of photodetectors based on 2D materials covering the detection spectrum from ultraviolet to infrared is presented in this paper, where a brief insight into the detection mechanisms of 2D material photodeterceptors as well as introducing the figure-of-merits which are key factors for a reasonable comparison between different photoderectors is provided.
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Photogating in Low Dimensional Photodetectors

TL;DR: The general photogating may enable simultaneous high gain and high bandwidth, paving the way to explore novel high‐performance photodetectors.
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Semiconductor quantum dots: Technological progress and future challenges

TL;DR: In quantum-confined semiconductor nanostructures, electrons exhibit distinctive behavior compared with that in bulk solids as mentioned in this paper, which enables the design of materials with tunable chemical, physical, electrical, and optical properties.
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Atomically thin noble metal dichalcogenide: a broadband mid-infrared semiconductor.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated experimentally for the first time that two-dimensional atomically thin PtSe2 has a variable bandgap in the mid-infrared via layer and defect engineering and this results pave the way foratomically thin 2D noble metal dichalcogenides to be employed in high-performance mid- Infrared optoelectronic devices.
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Plasmonic Silicon Quantum Dots Enabled High-Sensitivity Ultrabroadband Photodetection of Graphene-Based Hybrid Phototransistors

TL;DR: This work demonstrates the highly sensitive MIR photodetection of QD/graphene hybrid phototransistors by using plasmonic silicon (Si) QDs doped with boron (B), and the resulting UV-to-MIR ultrabroadband photodetic features ultrahigh responsivity, gain, and specific detectivity.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Efficient Hybrid Solar Cells Based on Meso-Superstructured Organometal Halide Perovskites

TL;DR: A low-cost, solution-processable solar cell, based on a highly crystalline perovskite absorber with intense visible to near-infrared absorptivity, that has a power conversion efficiency of 10.9% in a single-junction device under simulated full sunlight is reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum Dot Solar Cells. Semiconductor Nanocrystals as Light Harvesters

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Journal ArticleDOI

Hybrid graphene-quantum dot phototransistors with ultrahigh gain

TL;DR: A gain of ∼10(8) electrons per photon and a responsivity of ∼ 10(7) A W(-1) in a hybrid photodetector that consists of monolayer or bilayer graphene covered with a thin film of colloidal quantum dots is demonstrated.
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