Efficient Energy Transfer across Organic-2D Inorganic Heterointerfaces.
Che-Hsuan ChengZidong LiAaditya HambardeParag B DeotarePublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2018)
Combining organic and inorganic semiconductors enables us to integrate complementary advantages of each material system into a single hybrid material platform. Here, we report a study on the energy transport across a hybrid interface consisting of j-aggregates of organic dye and monolayer molybdenum disulfide (MoS2). The excellent overlap between the photoluminescence spectra of j-aggregates and the absorption of MoS2 B-exciton enables the material system to be used to study Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) across the hybrid interface. We report a short Förster radius of 1.88 nm for the hybrid system. We achieve this by fabricating photodetectors based on the hybrid organic-inorganic interface that combine the high absorption of organics with the high-charge mobility of inorganics. Concomitantly, the hybrid photodetectors show nearly 93 ± 5% enhancement of photoresponsivity in the excitonic spectral overlap regime due to efficient energy transfer (ET) from j-aggregate to MoS2. This work not only provides valuable insight into the ET mechanism across such hybrid organic-inorganic interfaces but also demonstrates the feasibility of the platform for designing efficient energy conversion and optoelectronic devices.