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1.
Nano Lett ; 24(1): 326-330, 2024 Jan 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38146954

ABSTRACT

Infrared spectrometers with the ability to resolve the spectral intensity and wavelength simultaneously are widely used in industry and the laboratory. However, their huge volume, high price, and cryogenic operating temperature limit their applications in the rapidly developing field of portable devices. Here, we demonstrate a room-temperature self-powered infrared spectrometer based on a single black phosphorus (BP) heterojunction diode. The nonlinearly gate-tunable photocurrent spectrum involving quantum-confined Franz-Keldysh and Burstein-Moss effects in a single BP/MoS2 diode instead of using space-consuming detector arrays provides a new dimension for resolving the intensity and wavelength information of spectra simultaneously. The active area for spectral sensing is only 1500 µm2, and the photodetection range is from 1.7 to 3.6 µm. Room-temperature operation, micrometer-scale size, and silicon-compatible technology make the BP/MoS2 heterojunction a promising configuration for portable spectrometer applications.

2.
Light Sci Appl ; 9: 114, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32637081

ABSTRACT

Mid-infrared (MIR) light-emitting devices play a key role in optical communications, thermal imaging, and material analysis applications. Two-dimensional (2D) materials offer a promising direction for next-generation MIR devices owing to their exotic optical properties, as well as the ultimate thickness limit. More importantly, van der Waals heterostructures-combining the best of various 2D materials at an artificial atomic level-provide many new possibilities for constructing MIR light-emitting devices of large tuneability and high integration. Here, we introduce a simple but novel van der Waals heterostructure for MIR light-emission applications built from thin-film BP and transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs), in which BP acts as an MIR light-emission layer. For BP-WSe2 heterostructures, an enhancement of ~200% in the photoluminescence intensities in the MIR region is observed, demonstrating highly efficient energy transfer in this heterostructure with type-I band alignment. For BP-MoS2 heterostructures, a room temperature MIR light-emitting diode (LED) is enabled through the formation of a vertical PN heterojunction at the interface. Our work reveals that the BP-TMDC heterostructure with efficient light emission in the MIR range, either optically or electrically activated, provides a promising platform for infrared light property studies and applications.

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