Publication | Closed Access
Study of sensitization process on mid-infrared uncooled PbSe photoconductive detectors leads to high detectivity
100
Citations
17
References
2013
Year
Optical MaterialsEngineeringOptoelectronic DevicesChemistryLuminescence PropertySensitization ProcessPbse SamplesSemiconductorsIi-vi SemiconductorPhotoelectric SensorElectronic DevicesPhotodetectorsOptical PropertiesOptical SensorIv–vi SemiconductorsCompound SemiconductorPhotoluminescenceHigh DetectivityPhotochemistryInfrared SpectroscopyOptoelectronic MaterialsPhotoelectric MeasurementOptical SensorsRoom TemperatureInfrared SensorNatural SciencesSpectroscopyApplied PhysicsOptoelectronics
For nearly a century, oxygen has been widely accepted as the key element that triggers photo-response in polycrystalline PbSe photoconductive detectors. Our photoluminescence and responsivity studies on PbSe samples, however, suggest that oxygen only serves as an effective sensitization improver and it is iodine rather than oxygen that plays the key role in triggering the photo-response. These studies shed light on the sensitization process for detector applications and ways to passivate defects in IV–VI semiconductors. As a result, high peak detectivity of 2.8 × 1010 cm·Hz1/2·W−1 was achieved at room temperature.
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