Uncooled High Detectivity Mid-Infrared Photoconductor Using HgTe Quantum Dots and Nanoantennas.
Augustin CaillasPhilippe Guyot-SionnestPublished in: ACS nano (2024)
Using a metal/insulator/metal (MIM) structure with a gold nanoantenna array made by electron beam lithography, the responsivity of a HgTe colloidal quantum dot film is enhanced in the mid-infrared. Simulations indicate that the spatially averaged peak spectral absorption of an 80 nm film is 60%, enhanced 23-fold compared to that of the same film on a bare sapphire substrate. The field intensity enhancement is focused near the antenna tips, being 20-fold 100 nm away, which represents only 1% of the total area and up to 1000-fold at the tips. The simulated polarized absorption spectra are in good agreement with the experiments, with a strong resonance around 4 μm. A responsivity of 0.6 A/W is obtained at a 1 V bias. Noise measurements separate the 1/f noise from the generation-recombination white noise and give a spatially averaged photoconductive gain of 0.3 at 1 V bias. The spatially averaged peak detectivity is improved 15-fold compared to the same film on a sapphire substrate without an MIM structure. The experimental peak detectivity reaches 9 × 10 9 Jones at 2650 cm -1 and 80 kHz, decreasing at lower frequencies. The MIM structure also enhances the spatially averaged peak photoluminescence of the CQD film by 16-fold, which is a potential Purcell enhancement. The good agreement between simulations and measurements confirms the viability of lithographically designed nanoantenna structures for vastly improving the performance of mid-IR colloidal quantum dot photoconductors. Further improvements will be possible by matching the optically enhanced and current collection areas.
Keyphrases
- quantum dots
- room temperature
- reduced graphene oxide
- energy transfer
- air pollution
- high resolution
- molecular dynamics
- gold nanoparticles
- monte carlo
- high frequency
- dna damage
- optical coherence tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- dna repair
- sensitive detection
- high intensity
- mass spectrometry
- computed tomography
- density functional theory
- electron transfer