4.8 Article

Electrochromic Photodetectors: Toward Smarter Glasses and Nano Reflective Displays via an Electrolytic Mechanism

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 11, Issue 31, Pages 27997-28004

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b06555

Keywords

electrochromic; photodetectors; tungsten oxide; smart glasses; reflective display

Funding

  1. Research and Development Program of Ghent University Global Campus, Korea
  2. Tomsk Polytechnic University Competitiveness Enhancement Program grant [VIU-316/2017]
  3. 100 Talents Program of Shanxi Province, P. R. China

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Electrochromic devices, serving as smart glasses, have not yet been intelligent enough to regulate lighting conditions independent of external photosensing devices. On the other hand, their bulky sandwich structures have been suffering setbacks utilized for reflective displays in an effort to compete with mature emissive displays. The key to resolve both problems lies in incorporating the photosensing function into electrochromic devices while simplifying their configuration via replacing ionic electrolytes. However, so far it has not yet been achieved because of the essential operating difference between the optoelectronic devices and the ionic devices. Herein, a concept of a smarter and thinner device: electrochromic photodetector is proposed to solve such problems. It is all-solid-state and electrolyte-free and operates with a simple thin metal-semiconductor-metal structure via an electrolytic mechanism. As a proof of concept, a configuration of the electrochromic photodetector is presented in this work based on a tungsten trioxide (WO3) thin film deposited on Au electrodes via facile, low-cost solution processes. The electrochromic photodetector switches between its photosensing and electrochromic functions via voltage modulation within 5 V, which is the result of the semiconductor-metal transition. The transition mechanism is further analyzed to be the voltage-triggered reversible oxygen/water vapor adsorption/intercalation from ambient air.

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