Atto‐Scale Noise near‐Infrared Organic Photodetectors Enabled by Controlling Interfacial Energetic Offset through Enhanced Anchoring Ability
Tae Hyuk Kim, Ji Hyeon Lee, Min Ho Jang, Gyeong Min Lee, Eun Soo Shim, Seunghyun Oh, Muhammad Ahsan Saeed, Min Jong Lee, Byoung Soo Yu, Do Kyung Hwang, Chae Won Park, Sae Youn Lee, Jea Woong Jo, Jae Won ShimAbstract
The near‐infrared (NIR) sensor technology is crucial for various applications such as autonomous driving and biometric tracking. Silicon photodetectors (SiPDs) are widely used in NIR applications; however, their scalability is limited by their crystalline properties. Organic photodetectors (OPDs) have attracted attention for NIR applications owing to their scalability, low‐temperature processing, and notably low dark current density (JD), which is similar to that of SiPDs. However, the still high JD (at NIR band) and few measurements of noise equivalent powers (NEPs) pose challenges for accurate performance comparisons. This study addresses these issues by quantitatively characterizing the performance matrix and JD generation mechanism using electron‐blocking layers (EBLs) in OPDs. The energy offset at an EBL/photosensitive layer interface determines the thermal activation energy and directly affects JD. A newly synthesized EBL (3PAFBr) substantially enhances the interfacial energy barrier by forming a homogeneous contact owing to the improved anchoring ability of 3PAFBr. As a result, the OPD with 3PAFBr yields a noise current of 852 aA (JD = 12.3 fA/cm2 at V → −0.1 V) and several femtowatt‐scale NEPs. To the best of our knowledge, this is an ultralow magnitude of JD in NIR OPDs. This also emphasizes the necessity for quantitative performance characterization.
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