AI Article Synopsis

  • Two-dimensional (2D) photodetectors traditionally struggle to balance high photoresponsivity and a large linear dynamic range, limiting their effectiveness in applications like imaging sensors.
  • Researchers introduce a new method called the "conductive-sensitizer strategy" that enhances both photoresponsivity and dynamic range, demonstrated with a bilayer structure of WS/GaS.
  • The design optimizes charge carrier transfer and uses band alignment to improve performance, achieving a linear dynamic range of 73 dB and stable photoresponsivity of 13 A/W under green light, while highlighting the importance of interlayer coupling and defects in the materials.

Article Abstract

Two-dimensional (2D) photodetectors based on photovoltaic effect or photogating effect can hardly achieve both high photoresponsivity and large linear dynamic range at the same time, which greatly limits many practical applications such as imaging sensors. Here, the conductive-sensitizer strategy, a general design for improving photoresponsivity and linear dynamic range in 2D photodetectors is provided and experimentally demonstrated on vertically stacked bilayer WS/GaS under a parallel circuit mode. Owing to successful band alignment engineering, the isotype type-II heterojunction enables efficient charge carrier transfer from WS, the high-mobility sensitizer, to GaS, the low-mobility channel, under illumination from a broad visible spectrum. The transferred electron charges introduce a reverse electric field which efficiently lowers the band offset between the two materials, facilitating a transition from low-mobility photocarrier transport to high-mobility photocarrier transport with increasing illumination power. We achieved a large linear dynamic range of 73 dB as well as a high and constant photoresponsivity of 13 A/W under green light. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, cathodoluminescence, and Kelvin probe force microscopy further identify the key role of defects in monolayer GaS in engineering the band alignment with monolayer WS. This work proposes a design route based on band and interface modulation for improving performance of 2D photodetectors and provides deep insights into the important role of strong interlayer coupling in offering heterostructures with desired properties and functions.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.1c06587DOI Listing

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