A Self-Powered High-Responsivity, Fast-Response-Speed Solar-Blind Ultraviolet Photodetector Based on CuO/β-Ga 2 O 3 Heterojunction with Built-In Potential Control.
Sangbin ParkYounghwa YoonHyungmin KimTaejun ParkKyunghwan KimJeongsoo HongPublished in: Nanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Controlling built-in potential can enhance the photoresponse performance of self-powered photodetectors. Among the methods for controlling the built-in potential of self-powered devices, postannealing is simpler, more efficient, and less expensive than ion doping and alternative material research. In this study, a CuO film was deposited on a β-Ga 2 O 3 epitaxial layer via reactive sputtering with an FTS system, and a self-powered solar-blind photodetector was fabricated through a CuO/β-Ga 2 O 3 heterojunction and postannealed at different temperatures. The postannealing process reduced the defects and dislocations at the interface between each layer and affected the electrical and structural properties of the CuO film. After postannealing at 300 °C, the carrier concentration of the CuO film increased from 4.24 × 10 18 to 1.36 × 10 20 cm -3 , bringing the Fermi level toward the valence band of the CuO film and increasing the built-in potential of the CuO/β-Ga 2 O 3 heterojunction. Thus, the photogenerated carriers were rapidly separated, increasing the sensitivity and response speed of the photodetector. The as-fabricated photodetector with 300 °C postannealing exhibited a photo-to-dark current ratio of 1.07 × 10 3 ; responsivity and detectivity of 30.3 mA/W and 1.10 × 10 12 Jones, respectively; and fast rise and decay times of 12 ms and 14 ms, respectively. After three months of storage in an open-air space, the photocurrent density of the photodetector was maintained, indicating good stability with aging. These results suggest that the photocharacteristics of CuO/β-Ga 2 O 3 heterojunction self-powered solar-blind photodetectors can be improved through built-in potential control using a postannealing process.