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Gold Enhanced Graphene-Based Photodetector on Optical Fiber with Ultrasensitivity over Near-Infrared Bands.

Wenguo ZhuSongqing YangHuadan ZhengYuansong ZhanDongquan LiGuobiao CenJieyuan TangHuihui LuJun ZhangZhijuan ZhaoWenjie MaiWeiguang XieWenxiao FangGuoguang LuJianhui YuZhe Chen
Published in: Nanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
Graphene has been widely used in photodetectors; however its photoresponsivity is limited due to the intrinsic low absorption of graphene. To enhance the graphene absorption, a waveguide structure with an extended interaction length and plasmonic resonance with light field enhancement are often employed. However, the operation bandwidth is narrowed when this happens. Here, a novel graphene-based all-fiber photodetector (AFPD) was demonstrated with ultrahigh responsivity over a full near-infrared band. The AFPD benefits from the gold-enhanced absorption when an interdigitated Au electrode is fabricated onto a Graphene-PMMA film covered over a side-polished fiber (SFP). Interestingly, the AFPD shows a photoresponsivity of >1 × 10 4 A/W and an external quantum efficiency of >4.6 × 10 6 % over a broadband region of 980-1620 nm. The proposed device provides a simple, low-cost, efficient, and robust way to detect optical fiber signals with intriguing capabilities in terms of distributed photodetection and on-line power monitoring, which is highly desirable for a fiber-optic communication system.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • carbon nanotubes
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  • high resolution
  • energy transfer
  • single molecule
  • quantum dots
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • high efficiency