Van der Waals heterostructures built from two-dimensional materials on a conventional semiconductor offer novel electronic and optoelectronic properties for next-generation information devices. Here we report that by simply stacking a vapor-phase-synthesized multilayer n-type WS2 film onto a p-type Si substrate, a high-responsivity Zener photodiode can be achieved. We find that above a small reverse threshold voltage of 0.5 V, the fabricated heterojunction exhibits Zener tunneling behavior which was confirmed by its negative temperature coefficient of the breakdown voltage. The WS2/Si heterojunction working in the Zener breakdown regime shows a stable and linear photoresponse, a broadband photoresponse ranging from 340 to 1100 nm with a maximum photoresponsivity of 5.7 A/W at 660 nm and a fast response speed of 670 μs. Such high performance can be attributed to the ultrathin depletion layer involved in the WS2/Si p-n junction, on which a strong electric field can be created even with a small reverse voltage and thereby enabling an efficient separation of the photogenerated electron-hole pairs.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.6b05109 | DOI Listing |
Nat Commun
January 2025
Institute for Quantum Computing, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
Landau-Zener tunneling, which describes the transition in a two-level system during a sweep through an anti-crossing, is a model applicable to a wide range of physical phenomena. Realistic quantum systems are affected by dissipation due to coupling to their environments. An important aspect of understanding such open quantum systems is the relative energy scales of the system itself and the system-environment coupling, which distinguishes the weak- and strong-coupling regimes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHere we experimentally demonstrate the dynamics of Bloch-Zener oscillations (BZOs) in a synthetic temporal lattice formed by the optical pulses in coupled fiber loops. By periodically modulating the phases imposed to the optical pulses in linear driven lattices, a two-band Floquet system with tunable bandgaps is realized, and the related BZOs that occurred in this system are displayed. On this basis, by manipulating the phase difference and coupling angle of the synthetic lattice, the widths of 0-gap and -gap are tuned feasibly so that a wide variety of the interplays between Bloch oscillations and Landau-Zener tunneling (LZT) are exhibited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2024
Institute of Aerospace Engineering, TUD Dresden University of Technology, 01307, Dresden, Germany.
Any means to control gravity like electromagnetism is currently out of reach by many orders of magnitude even under extreme laboratory conditions. Some often poorly executed experiments or pseudoscience theories appear from time to time claiming for example anomalous forces from capacitors that suggest a connection between the two fields. We developed novel and high resolution horizontal-, vertical- and rotation-balances that allow to test electric devices completely shielded and remotely controlled under high vacuum conditions to perform the first in-depth search for such a coupling using steady fields.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
May 2024
Department of Chemistry, Centre for Processable Electronics, Imperial College London, London W12 0BZ, United Kingdom.
This study reports a comparison of the kinetics of electrochemical (EC) versus photoelectrochemical (PEC) water oxidation on bismuth vanadate (BiVO) photoanodes. Plots of current density versus surface hole density, determined from operando optical absorption analyses under EC and PEC conditions, are found to be indistinguishable. We thus conclude that EC water oxidation is driven by the Zener effect tunneling electrons from the valence to conduction band under strong bias, with the kinetics of both EC and PEC water oxidation being determined by the density of accumulated surface valence band holes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
March 2024
National Institute of Standards and Technology, 325 Broadway, Boulder, Colorado 80305, USA.
We implement coherent delocalization as a tool for improving the two primary metrics of atomic clock performance: systematic uncertainty and instability. By decreasing atomic density with coherent delocalization, we suppress cold-collision shifts and two-body losses. Atom loss attributed to Landau-Zener tunneling in the ground lattice band would compromise coherent delocalization at low trap depths for our ^{171}Yb atoms; hence, we implement for the first time delocalization in excited lattice bands.
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