Open Access
Far-infrared photodetectors based on graphene/black-AsP heterostructures
Author(s) -
V. Ryzhii,
M. Ryzhii,
Vladimir Mitin,
Michael Shur,
Taiichi Otsuji
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
optics express
Language(s) - Uncategorized
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.394
H-Index - 271
ISSN - 1094-4087
DOI - 10.1364/oe.376299
Subject(s) - responsivity , photodetector , dark current , optoelectronics , infrared , photoconductivity , graphene , materials science , absorption (acoustics) , terahertz radiation , optics , physics , nanotechnology
We develop the device models for the far-infrared interband photodetectors (IPs) with the graphene-layer (GL) sensitive elements and the black Phosphorus (b-P) or black-Arsenic (b-As) barrier layers (BLs). These far-infrared GL/BL-based IPs (GBIPs) can operate at the photon energies ℏ Ω smaller than the energy gap, Δ G , of the b-P or b-As or their compounds, namely, at ℏ Ω ≲2 Δ G /3 corresponding to the wavelength range λ ≳(6-12) μ m. The GBIP operation spectrum can be shifted to the terahertz range by increasing the bias voltage. The BLs made of the compounds b-As x B 1-x with different x, enable the GBIPs with desirable spectral characteristics. The GL doping level substantially affects the GBIP characteristics and is important for their optimization. A remarkable feature of the GBIPs under consideration is a substantial (over an order of magnitude) lowering of the dark current due to a partial suppression of the dark-current gain accompanied by a fairly high photoconductive gain. Due to a large absorption coefficient and photoconductive gain, the GBIPs can exhibit large values of the internal responsivity and dark-current-limited detectivity exceeding those of the quantum-well and quantum-dot IPs using the intersubband transitions. The GBIPs with the b-P and b-As BLs can operate at longer radiation wavelengths than the infrared GL-based IPs comprising the BLs made of other van der Waals materials and can also compete with all kinds of the far-infrared photodetectors.