Scalable Fabrication of Black Phosphorous Films for Infrared Photodetector Arrays.
Alexander CorlettoPurevlkham MyagmarsereejidShifan WangWei YanSivacarendran BalendhranHuan LiuYu Lin ZhongKenneth B CrozierMunkhbayar BatmunkhJames BullockPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2024)
Bulk black phosphorous (bP) exhibits excellent infrared (IR) optoelectronic properties, but most reported bP IR photodetectors are fabricated from single exfoliated flakes with lateral sizes of < 100 µm. Here, scalable thin films of bP suitable for IR photodetector arrays are realized through a tailored solution-deposition method. The properties of the bP film and their protective capping layers are optimized to fabricate bP IR photoconductors exhibiting specific detectivities up to 4.0 × 10 8 cm Hz 1/2 W -1 with fast 30/60 µs rise/fall times under λ = 2.2 µm illumination. The scalability of the bP thin film fabrication is demonstrated by fabricating a linear array of 25 bP photodetectors and obtaining 25 × 25 pixel IR images at ≈203 ppi with good spatial fidelity. This research demonstrates a commercially viable method of fabricating scalable bP thin films for optoelectronic devices including room temperature-operable IR photodetector arrays.