Publication | Closed Access
Stable, highly-responsive and broadband photodetection based on large-area multilayered WS<sub>2</sub> films grown by pulsed-laser deposition
317
Citations
28
References
2015
Year
Optical MaterialsEngineeringNanosheetOptoelectronic DevicesChemistrySemiconductorsPulsed Laser DepositionBroadband PhotodetectionMaterials SciencePhotonicsElectrical EngineeringOptoelectronic MaterialsPulsed-laser DepositionTypical TmdLayered MaterialTransition Metal ChalcogenidesTungsten DisulfideMultilayered Ws2 FilmsApplied PhysicsGrapheneMultilayer HeterostructuresOptoelectronics
The progress in the field of graphene has aroused a renaissance of keen research interest in layered transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). Tungsten disulfide (WS2), a typical TMD with favorable semiconducting band gap and strong light-matter interaction, exhibits great potential for highly-responsive photodetection. However, WS2-based photodetection is currently unsatisfactory due to the low optical absorption (2%-10%) and poor carrier mobility (0.01-0.91 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1)) of the thin WS2 layers grown by chemical vapor deposition (CVD). Here, we introduce pulsed-laser deposition (PLD) to prepare multilayered WS2 films. Large-area WS2 films of the magnitude of cm(2) are achieved. Comparative measurements of a WS2-based photoresistor demonstrate its stable broadband photoresponse from 370 to 1064 nm, the broadest range demonstrated in WS2 photodetectors. Benefiting from the large optical absorbance (40%-85%) and high carrier mobility (31 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1)), the responsivity of the device approaches a high value of 0.51 A W(-1) in an ambient environment. Such a performance far surpasses the CVD-grown WS2-based photodetectors (μA W(-1)). In a vacuum environment, the responsivity is further enhanced to 0.70 A W(-1) along with an external quantum efficiency of 137% and a photodetectivity of 2.7 × 10(9) cm Hz(1/2) W(-1). These findings stress that the PLD-grown WS2 film may constitute a new paradigm for the next-generation stable, broadband and highly-responsive photodetectors.
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