Binary Multifunctional Ultrabroadband Self-Powered g-C3N4 /Si Heterojunction High-Speed Photodetector
Abstract
Compact optical detectors with fast binary photoswitching over a broad range of wavelength are essential as an interconnect for any light-based parallel, real-time computing. Despite of the tremendous technological advancements yet there is no such single device available that meets the specifications. Here we report a multifunctional self-powered high-speed ultrabroadband (250-1650 nm) photodetector based on g-C3N4/Si hybrid 2D/3D structure. The device shows a novel binary photoswitching (change in current from positive to negative) in response to OFF/ON light illumination at small forward bias (<0.1 V) covering 250-1350 nm. At zero bias, the device displays an extremely high ON/OFF ratio of 1.2 x 105 under 680 nm (49 microWcm-2) illumination. The device also shows an ultrasensitive behaviour over the entire operating range at low light illuminations, with highest responsivity (1.2 AW-1), detectivity (2.8 x 1014 Jones) and external quantum efficiency (213%) at 680 nm. The response and recovery speeds are typically 0.23 and 0.60 ms, respectively, under 288 Hz light switching frequency. Dramatically improved performance of our device is attributed to the heterojunctions formed by the ultrathin g-C3N4 nanosheets embedded in the Si surface.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.