Multidimensional Perovskites for High Detectivity Photodiodes.
Riccardo OllearoAlessandro CaiazzoJunyu LiMarco FattoriAlbert J J M van BreemenMartijn M WienkGerwin H GelinckRené A J JanssenPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2022)
Low-dimensional perovskites attract increasing interest due to tunable optoelectronic properties and high stability. Here, it is shown that perovskite thin films with a vertical gradient in dimensionality result in graded electronic bandgap structures that are ideal for photodiode applications. Positioning low-dimensional, vertically-oriented perovskite phases at the interface with the electron blocking layer increases the activation energy for thermal charge generation and thereby effectively lowers the dark current density to a record-low value of 5 × 10 -9 mA cm -2 without compromising responsivity, resulting in a noise-current-based specific detectivity exceeding 7 × 10 12 Jones at 600 nm. These multidimensional perovskite photodiodes show promising air stability and a dynamic range over ten orders of magnitude, and thus represent a new generation of high-performance low-cost photodiodes.