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Self-Powered Infrared Photodetectors with Ultra-High Speed and Detectivity Based on Amorphous Cu-Based MOF Films.

Shuangyin GaoYi HuangJin TanJianmei XuLing ZhaoWei ZhouZhihong YangJian SunHao Gong
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
Amorphous metal-organic frameworks (aMOFs) start to challenge their crystalline equivalents due to their unique advantages, like lack of grain boundaries, isotropy, flexibility, numerous defects-induced active sites, etc. However, aMOFs are typically synthesized under rigorous conditions, and their properties and applications need to be further explored. In this work, highly transparent p-type amorphous Cu-HHTP films consisting of Cu 2+ and 2,3,6,7,10,11-hexahydroxytriphenylene (HHTP) were synthesized using a simple electrostatic spinning method and identified as p-a-Cu-HHTP. Besides, a p-a-Cu-HHTP/n-Si infrared photodetector (PD) operating on a self-powered basis with ultra-high speed (response time of 40 μs) and detectivity (1.2 × 10 12 Jones) has been developed, with a response time and detectivity that are record values for a MOF-based photodetector. In particular, the p-a-Cu-HHTP/n-Si PD can withstand high temperatures up to 180 °C without property change. Moreover, a flexible metal-semiconductor-metal photodetector based on p-a-Cu-HHTP is constructed, which shows excellent mechanical stability and photoresponse that remain unchanged after bending 120 times, implying its suitability for wearable optoelectronics. The new method to fabricate aMOFs, the unique p-a-Cu-HHTP, and its PDs initiated in this work opens up a new avenue in organic-inorganic hybrid optoelectronics.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • room temperature
  • high speed
  • aqueous solution
  • high resolution
  • atomic force microscopy
  • ionic liquid
  • oxidative stress
  • blood pressure
  • mass spectrometry
  • heart rate
  • perovskite solar cells