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Engineering vacancies in Bi2S3 yielding sub-bandgap photoresponse and highly sensitive short-wave infrared photodetectors
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Defects play an important role in tailoring the optoelectronic properties of materials. Here we demonstrate that sulphur vacancies are able to engineer sub-band photoresponse into the short-wave infrared range due to formation of in-gap states in Bi2S3 single crystals supported by density functional (DF) calculations. Sulfurization and subsequent refill of the vacancies results in faster response but limits the spectral range to the near infrared as determined by the bandgap of Bi2S3. A facile chemical treatment is then explored to accelerate the speed of sulphur deficient (SD)-based detectors on the order of 10 ms without sacrificing its spectral coverage into the infrared, while holding a high D* close to 10^15 Jones in the visible-near infrared range and 10^12 Jones at 1.6 um. This work also provides new insights into the role sulphur vacancies play on the electronic structure and, as a result, into sub-bandgap photoresponse enabling ultrasensitive, fast and broadband photodetectors.
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Notes :
- English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1286538747
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource