Flexible Miniaturized Multispectral Detector Derived from Blade-Coated Organic Narrowband Response Unit Array.
Zeyao HanXunfan LiaoYousheng ZouYin HeJunyu LiYu GuDawei HuJiaxin LiuLijian ZuoYongsheng LiuXiaobao XuPublished in: ACS nano (2022)
Multispectral sensing is extremely desired in intelligent systems, e.g., autonomous vehicles, encrypted information communication, and health biometric monitoring, due to its highly sensitive spectral discrimination ability. Nevertheless, rigid bulky optics and delicate optical paths in devices significantly increase their complexity and size, which subsequently impede their integration in smart optoelectronic chips for universal applications. In this work, a filterless miniaturized multispectral photodetector is realized with an organic narrowband response unit array. With the manipulation of Frenkel exciton dissociation in active layers, a series of narrowband organic sensing units with full-width-at-half-maximum (fwhm) narrowing to ∼50 nm are achieved from 700 to 1050 nm with a laudable performance of responsivity of over 60 mA/W, -3 dB bandwidth over 10 kHz, linear dynamic range (LDR) reaching ∼120 dB, and a low noise current of less than 4 × 10 -14 A·Hz -0.5 . Furthermore, a 6 × 8 multispectral sensing array on a flexible substrate was fabricated with blade-coating. Assisted by a computational process, we successfully demonstrate the spectral recognition with a resolution of ∼50 nm and a mismatch of ∼10 nm. Finally, the function of matter identification is successfully achieved with our multispectral detector array.